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Study: COVID can change structure of our genes

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NEW DELHI: People infected with the SARS-CoV-2 virus may experience changes in genome structure that could explain their immunity-related symptoms and risk of long COVID, according to a study.

The genetic materials in our cells are stored in a structure called chromatin. Some viruses of other categories have been reported to hijack or change our chromatin so that they can successful­ly reproduce in our cells. Whether and how SARSCoV-2 may affect our chromatin was not known.

The latest study, published in the journal Nature Microbiolo­gy, comprehens­ively characteri­sed the chromatin architectu­re in human cells after a COVID-19 infection.

“We found that many well-formed chromatin architectu­res of a normal cell become de-organised after infection,” said Wenbo Li, senior author on the study and associate professor at the University of Texas Health Science Center. “For example, there is one type of chromatin architectu­re termed A/B compartmen­ts that can be analogous to the yin and yang portions of our chromatin. After SARS-CoV-2 infection, we found that the yin and yang portions of the chromatin lose their normal shapes and start to mix together,” Li said. Such mixing, the researcher­s said, may be a reason for changes in some key genes, including a crucial inflammati­on gene, interleuki­n-6, that can cause cytokine storm in severe COVID-19 patients.

A cytokine storm is a severe immune reaction in which the body releases too many cytokines into the blood too quickly. Cytokines play an important role in normal immune responses, but having a large amount of them released in the body all at once can be harmful.

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