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Trans-ethnic genome-wide association study of severe COVID-19.

Authors :
Wu, Peng
Ding, Lin
Li, Xiaodong
Liu, Siyang
Cheng, Fanjun
He, Qing
Xiao, Mingzhong
Wu, Ping
Hou, Hongyan
Jiang, Minghui
Long, Pinpin
Wang, Hao
Liu, Linlin
Qu, Minghan
Shi, Xian
Jiang, Qin
Mo, Tingting
Ding, Wencheng
Fu, Yu
Han, Shi
Source :
Communications Biology. 8/31/2021, Vol. 4 Issue 1, p1-10. 10p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

COVID-19 has caused numerous infections with diverse clinical symptoms. To identify human genetic variants contributing to the clinical development of COVID-19, we genotyped 1457 (598/859 with severe/mild symptoms) and sequenced 1141 (severe/mild: 474/667) patients of Chinese ancestry. We further incorporated 1401 genotyped and 948 sequenced ancestry-matched population controls, and tested genome-wide association on 1072 severe cases versus 3875 mild or population controls, followed by trans-ethnic meta-analysis with summary statistics of 3199 hospitalized cases and 897,488 population controls from the COVID-19 Host Genetics Initiative. We identified three significant signals outside the well-established 3p21.31 locus: an intronic variant in FOXP4-AS1 (rs1853837, odds ratio OR = 1.28, P = 2.51 × 10−10, allele frequencies in Chinese/European AF = 0.345/0.105), a frameshift insertion in ABO (rs8176719, OR = 1.19, P = 8.98 × 10−9, AF = 0.422/0.395) and a Chinese-specific intronic variant in MEF2B (rs74490654, OR = 8.73, P = 1.22 × 10−8, AF = 0.004/0). These findings highlight an important role of the adaptive immunity and the ABO blood-group system in protection from developing severe COVID-19. Chaolong Wang and colleagues report a large genome-wide association study for COVID-19 severity in Chinese individuals. By meta-analysis with European data, they identify 3 loci associated with severe disease that suggest key roles for the adaptive immune system and the ABO blood group system in development of severe COVID-19. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23993642
Volume :
4
Issue :
1
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Communications Biology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
152183628
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s42003-021-02549-5