Acute Respiratory Distress Syndrome in patients with COVID-19 can
lead to death but more than 50% of these cases are associated with
co-infection with bacterial pathogens.
A new investigation at Flinders University, funded under the new
University’s COVID-19 Research Grant scheme, is looking at why the
presence of bacterial pathogens seems to predispose individuals to
severe COVID-19.
The research is seeking to reduce the rising toll by focusing on the
role of bacterial infection before infection with the SARS-CoV-2
virus—and what impact these pathogens have on respiratory failure.
Lead researcher Dr. Bart Eijkelkamp’s Bacterial Host Adaptation Research Laboratory and medical experts at Flinders aim to connect respiratory tract bacterial colonisation with COVID-19 outcomes in the community.
“Patients with pre-existing respiratory disease, which often includes
an elevated presence of bacteria in the nose, throat and lungs, are
among those with the highest COVID-19 death rates,” says Dr. Eijkelkamp,
a lecturer in microbiology.
“This research will help us define the importance of tracking and
treating bacterial infection in susceptible populations such as the
elderly and immune compromised to prevent the onset of life-threatening
COVID-19.”
Dr. Eijkelkamp says the research might help to understand why some people’s response to the disease is worse than others.
Protrusions or ‘spikes’ on the surface of SARS-CoV-2, the virus
responsible for COVID-19, are known to interact with receptors on lung
cells prior to getting into the cells to cause disease.
“Our project will examine the impact of various distinct bacterial
respiratory pathogens on the abundance of these host receptors that are
critical for SARS-CoV-2 to cause disease. A greater abundance of these
factors is likely to result in more severe COVID-19 outcomes.”
“A person’s response to bacterial pathogens are highly specific, and
our research will define the propensity for the development of severe
COVID-19 when colonised by distinct risk pathogens,” says
co-investigator Professor Claire Roberts.
Professor Roberts and Associate Professor Robyn Meech, two experts in
host receptor proteins, join a multidisciplinary Flinders University
team including Dr. Eijkelkamp and research associate Felise Adams from
the Bacterial Host Adaptation Research Laboratory, and virologist
Associate Professor Jill Carr and protein biochemist Dr. Timothy
Chataway from the College of Medicine and Public Health.
https://medicalxpress.com/news/2020-04-covid-deaths.html
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