Back to Search Start Over

Mendelian randomisation identifies alternative splicing of the FAS death receptor as a mediator of severe COVID-19

Authors :
Barbara Thorand
Lars Lind
Anne Richmond
Artemis Papadaki
Erola Pairo-Castineira
Oskar Hansson
Andreas Göteson
Dirk S. Paul
Nicola Pirastu
Eleanor Wheeler
Stefan Enroth
Chen Yao
Karsten Suhre
John Danesh
Daniel Levy
Lucija Klaric
Tõnu Esko
Jingyuan Fu
Shih-Jen Hwang
Daniela Zanetti
Themistocles L. Assimes
James F. Wilson
Niclas Eriksson
Nicholas J. Wareham
Karl Michaëlsson
Caroline Hayward
Stefan Gustafsson
Daria V. Zhernakova
Anders Mälarstig
Peter K. Joshi
Martin Magnusson
Christian Gieger
John R. Petrie
Claudia Langenberg
Rona J Strawbridge
Christian Herder
James E. Peters
Åsa K. Hedman
Erin Macdonald-Dunlop
Arianna Landini
Bram Prins
Mikael Landén
J Kenneth Baillie
Niklas Mattsson-Carlgren
Harry Campbell
Johan Sundström
Charles Kooperberg
Jack Gisby
Yan Chen
Leonid Padyukov
Lars Wallentin
Paul R. H. J. Timmers
Alexander P. Reiner
Adam S. Butterworth
Agneta Siegbahn
Lasse Folkersen
Alex Tokolyi
Bruna Gigante
J. Gustav Smith
Mark Walker
Urmo Võsa
Ulf Gyllensten
Marisa D Muckian
Åsa Johansson
Anette Kalnapenkis
Andrew P. Morris
Elodie Persyn
Jing Hua Zhao
Source :
medRxiv, article-version (status) pre, article-version (number) 1
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Severe COVID-19 is characterised by immunopathology and epithelial injury. Proteomic studies have identified circulating proteins that are biomarkers of severe COVID-19, but cannot distinguish correlation from causation. To address this, we performed Mendelian randomisation (MR) to identify proteins that mediate severe COVID-19. Using protein quantitative trait loci (pQTL) data from the SCALLOP consortium, involving meta-analysis of up to 26,494 individuals, and COVID-19 genome-wide association data from the Host Genetics Initiative, we performed MR for 157 COVID-19 severity protein biomarkers. We identified significant MR results for five proteins: FAS, TNFRSF10A, CCL2, EPHB4 and LGALS9. Further evaluation of these candidates using sensitivity analyses and colocalization testing provided strong evidence to implicate the apoptosis-associated cytokine receptor FAS as a causal mediator of severe COVID-19. This effect was specific to severe disease. Using RNA-seq data from 4,778 individuals, we demonstrate that the pQTL at theFASlocus results from genetically influenced alternate splicing causing skipping of exon 6. We show that the risk allele for very severe COVID-19 increases the proportion of transcripts lacking exon 6, and thereby increases soluble FAS. Soluble FAS acts as a decoy receptor for FAS-ligand, inhibiting apoptosis induced through membrane-bound FAS. In summary, we demonstrate a novel genetic mechanism that contributes to risk of severe of COVID-19, highlighting a pathway that may be a promising therapeutic target.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
medRxiv : the preprint server for health sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ae2b511ef1aade97000361e828da7158