Journal
HUMAN GENETICS AND GENOMICS ADVANCES
Volume 3, Issue 2, Pages -Publisher
ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.xhgg.2022.100095
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Funding
- NIH Intramural Research Program funds [28525]
- Medical Research Council, Department of Health, Scottish government
- Northwest Regional Development Agency
- Welsh assembly government
- British Heart Foundation
- Common Fund of the Office of the Director of the National Institutes of Health
- NCI
- NHGRI
- NHLBI
- NIDA
- NIMH
- NINDS
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Host genetic variants play a role in the susceptibility and severity of COVID-19. Research has identified genetic associations with COVID-19 that could aid in the development of new therapeutic strategies. Multiple genetic loci were found to be associated with COVID-19 susceptibility and severity, providing insights into the genetic mechanisms involved.
Host genetic variants influence the susceptibility and severity of several infectious diseases, and the discovery of genetic associations with coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) phenotypes could help to develop new therapeutic strategies to decrease its burden. Between May 2020 and June 2021, we used COVID-19 data released periodically by UK Biobank and performed 65 genome-wide association studies in up to 18 releases of COVID-19 susceptibility (n = 18,481 cases in June 2021), hospitalization (n = 3,260), severe outcomes (n = 1,244), and deaths (n = 1,104), stratified by sex and ancestry. In coherence with previous studies, we observed two independent signals at the chr3p21.31 locus (rs73062389-A, odds ratio [OR], 1.21 (P = 4.26 x 10(-15)) and rs71325088-C, OR, 1.62 [P = 2.25 x 10(-9)]) modulating susceptibility and severity, respectively, and a signal influencing susceptibility at the ABO locus (rs9411378-A; OR, 1.10; P = 3.30 x 10(-12)), suggesting an increased risk of infection in non-O blood groups carriers. Additional signals at the APOE (associated with severity and death) LRMDA (susceptibility in non-European) and chr2q32.3 (susceptibility in women) loci were also identified, but did not replicate in independent datasets. We then devised an approach to extract variants suggestively associated (P < 10(-5)), exhibiting an increase in significance over time. When applied to the susceptibility, hospitalization and severity analyses, this approach revealed the known RPL24, DPP9, and MAPT loci, respectively, among hundreds of other signals. These results, freely available on the GRASP portal, provide insights on the genetic mechanisms involved in COVID-19 phenotypes.
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