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1.
Guillaume Butler-Laporte; Gundula Povysil; Jack A Kosmicki; Elizabeth T Cirulli; Theodore Drivas; Simone Furini; Chadi Saad; Axel Schmidt; Pawel Olszewski; Urszula Korotko; Mathieu Quinodoz; Elifnaz Celik; Kousik Kundu; Klaudia Walter; Junghyung Jung; Amy D Stockwell; Laura G Sloofman; Daniel M Jordan; Ryan C Thompson; Diane Del Valle Del Valle; Nicole Simons Simons; Esther Cheng Cheng; Robert Sebra Sebra; Eric E Schadt; Seunghee Schulze-Kim Shulze-Kim; Sacha Gnjatic Gnjatic; Miriam Merad Merad; Joseph D Buxbaum; Noam D Beckmann; Alexander W Charney; Bartlomiej Przychodzen; Timothy Chang; Tess D Pottinger; Ning Shang; Fabian Brand; Francesca Fava; Francesca Mari; Karolina Chwialkowska; Magdalena Niemira; Szymon Pula; J Kenneth Baillie; Alex Stuckey; Antonio Salas; Xabier Bello; Jacobo Pardo-Seco; Alberto Gomez-Carballa; Irene Rivero-Calle; Federico Martinon-Torres; Andrea Ganna; Konrad J Karczewski; Kumar Veerapen; Mathieu Bourgey; Guillaume Bourque; Robert JM Eveleigh; Vincenzo Forgetta; David Morrison; David Langlais; Mark Lathrop; Vincent Mooser; Tomoko Nakanishi; Robert Frithiof; Michael Hultstrom; Miklos Lipcsey; Yanara Marincevic-Zuniga; Jessica Nordlund; Kelly M Schiabor Barrett; William Lee; Alexandre Bolze; Simon White; Stephen Riffle; Francisco Tanudjaja; Efren Sandoval; Iva Neveux; Shaun Dabe; Nicolas Casadei; Susanne Motameny; Manal Alaamery; Salam Massadeh; Nora Aljawini; Mansour S Almutairi; Yaseen M Arab; Saleh A Alqahtan; Fawz S Al Harthi; Amal Almutairi; Fatima Alqubaishi; Sarah Alotaibi; Albandari Binowayn; Ebtehal A Alsolm; Hadeel El Bardisy; Mohammad Fawzy; - COVID-19 Host Genetics Initiative; - DeCOI Host Genetics Group; - GEN-COVID Multicenter Study (Italy); - Mount Sinai Clinical Intelligence Center; - GEN-COVID consortium (Spain); - GenOMICC Consortium; - Japan COVID-19 Task Force; - Regeneron Genetics Center; Daniel H Geschwind; Stephanie Arteaga; Alexis Stephens; Manish J Butte; Paul C Boutros; Takafumi N Yamaguchi; Shu Tao; Stefan Eng; Timothy Sanders; Paul J Tung; Michael E Broudy; Yu Pan; Alfredo Gonzalez; Nikhil Chavan; Ruth Johnson; Bogdan Pasaniuc; Brian Yaspan; Sandra Smieszek; Carlo Rivolta; Stephanie Bibert; Pierre-Yves Bochud; Maciej Dabrowski; Pawel Zawadzki; Mateusz Sypniewski; Elzbieta Kaja; Pajaree Chariyavilaskul; Voraphoj Nilaratanakul; Nattiya Hirankarn; Vorasuk Shotelersuk; Monnat Pongpanich; Chureerat Phokaew; Wanna Chetruengchai; Katsuhi Tokunaga; Masaya Sugiyama; Yosuke Kawai; Takanori Hasegawa; Tatsuhiko Naito; Ho Namkoong; Ryuya Edahiro; Akinori Kimura; Seishi Ogawa; Takanori Kanai; Koichi Fukunaga; Yukinori Okada; Seiya Imoto; Satoru Miyano; Serghei Mangul; Malak S Abedalthagafi; Hugo Zeberg; Joseph J Grzymski; Nicole L Washington; Stephan Ossowski; Kerstin U Ludwig; Eva C Schulte; Olaf Riess; Marcin Moniuszko; Miroslaw Kwasniewski; Hamdi Mbarek; Said I Ismail; Anurag Verma; David B Goldstein; Krzysztof Kiryluk; Alessandra Renieri; Manuel AR Ferreira; J Brent Richards.
Preprint in English | medRxiv | ID: ppmedrxiv-22273040

ABSTRACT

Host genetics is a key determinant of COVID-19 outcomes. Previously, the COVID-19 Host Genetics Initiative genome-wide association study used common variants to identify multiple loci associated with COVID-19 outcomes. However, variants with the largest impact on COVID-19 outcomes are expected to be rare in the population. Hence, studying rare variants may provide additional insights into disease susceptibility and pathogenesis, thereby informing therapeutics development. Here, we combined whole-exome and whole-genome sequencing from 21 cohorts across 12 countries and performed rare variant exome-wide burden analyses for COVID-19 outcomes. In an analysis of 5,085 severe disease cases and 571,737 controls, we observed that carrying a rare deleterious variant in the SARS-CoV-2 sensor toll-like receptor TLR7 (on chromosome X) was associated with a 5.3-fold increase in severe disease (95% CI: 2.75-10.05, p=5.41x10-7). This association was consistent across sexes. These results further support TLR7 as a genetic determinant of severe disease and suggest that larger studies on rare variants influencing COVID-19 outcomes could provide additional insights. Author SummaryCOVID-19 clinical outcomes vary immensely, but a patients genetic make-up is an important determinant of how they will fare against the virus. While many genetic variants commonly found in the populations were previously found to be contributing to more severe disease by the COVID-19 Host Genetics Initiative, it isnt clear if more rare variants found in less individuals could also play a role. This is important because genetic variants with the largest impact on COVID-19 severity are expected to be rarely found in the population, and these rare variants require different technologies to be studies (usually whole-exome or whole-genome sequencing). Here, we combined sequencing results from 21 cohorts across 12 countries to perform a rare variant association study. In an analysis comprising 5,085 participants with severe COVID-19 and 571,737 controls, we found that the gene for toll-like receptor 7 (TLR7) on chromosome X was an important determinant of severe COVID-19. Importantly, despite being found on a sex chromosome, this observation was consistent across both sexes.

2.
Preprint in English | medRxiv | ID: ppmedrxiv-21262965

ABSTRACT

Critical illness in COVID-19 is caused by inflammatory lung injury, mediated by the host immune system. We and others have shown that host genetic variation influences the development of illness requiring critical care1 or hospitalisation2;3;4 following SARS-Co-V2 infection. The GenOMICC (Genetics of Mortality in Critical Care) study recruits critically-ill cases and compares their genomes with population controls in order to find underlying disease mechanisms. Here, we use whole genome sequencing and statistical fine mapping in 7,491 critically-ill cases compared with 48,400 population controls to discover and replicate 22 independent variants that significantly predispose to life-threatening COVID-19. We identify 15 new independent associations with critical COVID-19, including variants within genes involved in interferon signalling (IL10RB, PLSCR1), leucocyte differentiation (BCL11A), and blood type antigen secretor status (FUT2). Using transcriptome-wide association and colocalisation to infer the effect of gene expression on disease severity, we find evidence implicating expression of multiple genes, including reduced expression of a membrane flippase (ATP11A), and increased mucin expression (MUC1), in critical disease. We show that comparison between critically-ill cases and population controls is highly efficient for genetic association analysis and enables detection of therapeutically-relevant mechanisms of disease. Therapeutic predictions arising from these findings require testing in clinical trials.

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