Oxidative stress and PARP activation in the lungs is an early event in COVID-19 pneumonia.

Publication date: Sep 01, 2025

Oxidative stress and poly (ADP-ribosyl)ation (PARylation) leads to tissue damage and inflammation in multiple lung diseases, likely in COVID-19. In a previous study we evidenced PARylation in multiple pulmonary cell types in patients who died of COVID-19, but not in patients who died of non-COVID-19 causes. We extended these observations in this retrospective immunohistochemical study by enlarging and stratifying the study population to identify subpopulations with high expression of the markers assessed in the study. We showed that pulmonary PARylation and oxidative stress peaked in the exudative and then decreased in the proliferative phase. PARylation correlated with viral load and with the oxidative stress in the tissues, however, correlation between viral load and oxidative stress was marginal suggesting that oxidative stress and the presence of SARS-CoV-2 can independently induce PARylation. Pulmonary oxidative stress, PARylation and TNFα expression correlated with the serum markers of liver and kidney damage, oxygen transport, tissue hypoxia, lymphocytopenia, blood clotting and disseminated intravascular coagulation. In males the time of hospitalization (time to death) was inversely correlated with pulmonary PARylation. Furthermore, males, died of COVID-19, were ∼15 years younger than females, however, there was no difference in pulmonary oxidative stress and PARylation between genders at death. Taken together, pulmonary PARylation and oxidative stress manifests early, in the exudative phase of COVID-19 and PARylation contributes to worse clinical outcome for males. These results suggest repurposing pharmacological PARP inhibitors for acute COVID-19 to counteract tissue damage.

Concepts Keywords
Hospitalization 4-Hydroxy-2-nonenal
Kidney 4HNE
Males Adult
Pneumonia Aged
Ribosylation Biomarkers
Biomarkers
COVID-19
COVID-19
Disseminated intravascular coagulation
Endothel
Female
Humans
Lung
Male
Middle Aged
Oxidative Stress
Oxidative stress
PARP
Pneumocyte
Poly(ADP-Ribose)
Retrospective Studies
SARS-CoV-2
SARS-CoV-2
Viral Load

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH Oxidative stress
disease MESH COVID-19
disease MESH pneumonia
disease MESH inflammation
disease MESH lung diseases
disease IDO cell
disease MESH causes
disease MESH viral load
disease MESH hypoxia
disease MESH lymphocytopenia
disease MESH disseminated intravascular coagulation
disease MESH death

Original Article

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