4.4 Article

HLA genetic polymorphism in patients with Coronavirus Disease 2019 in Midwestern United States

Journal

HLA
Volume 98, Issue 4, Pages 370-379

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/tan.14387

Keywords

COVID-19; disease association; HLA; SARS-CoV-2

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [R41 AI142919-01]
  2. Washington University School of Medicine Department of Pathology and Immunology

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This study identified several HLA alleles associated with COVID-19 in a population-based case-control study, supporting the idea that specific HLA alleles may be protective or predisposing factors to the disease. Further consortium analysis and correlation with viral peptide binding studies are needed to validate and extend these findings.
The experience of individuals with Coronavirus Disease 2019 (COVID-19) ranges from asymptomatic to life threatening multi-organ dysfunction. Specific HLA alleles may affect the predisposition to severe COVID-19 because of their role in presenting viral peptides to launch the adaptive immune response to severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2). In this population-based case-control study in the midwestern United States, we performed high-resolution HLA typing of 234 cases hospitalized for COVID-19 in the St. Louis metropolitan area and compared their HLA allele frequencies with those of 22,000 matched controls from the National Marrow Donor Program (NMDP). We identified two predisposing alleles, HLA-DRB1*08:02 in the Hispanic group (OR = 9.0, 95% confidence interval: 2.2-37.9; adjusted p = 0.03) and HLA-A*30:02 in younger African Americans with ages below the median (OR = 2.2, 1.4-3.6; adjusted p = 0.01), and several candidate alleles with potential associations with COVID-19 in African American, White, and Hispanic groups. We also detected risk-associated amino acid residues in the peptide binding grooves of some of these alleles, suggesting the presence of functional associations. These findings support the notion that specific HLA alleles may be protective or predisposing factors to COVID-19. Future consortium analysis of pooled cases and controls is warranted to validate and extend these findings, and correlation with viral peptide binding studies will provide additional evidence for the functional association between HLA alleles and COVID-19.

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