ABSTRACT
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) caused by the severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) may lead to life-threatening respiratory symptoms. Understanding the genetic basis of the prognosis of COVID-19 is important for risk profiling of potentially severe symptoms. Here, we conducted a genome-wide epistasis study of COVID-19 severity in 2243 patients with severe symptoms and 12,612 patients with no or mild symptoms from the UK Biobank, followed by a replication study in an independent Spanish cohort (1416 cases, 4382 controls). Our study highlighted 3 interactions with genome-wide significance in the discovery phase, nominally significant in the replication phase, and enhanced significance in the meta-analysis. For example, the lead interaction was found between rs9792388 upstream of PDGFRL and rs3025892 downstream of SNAP25, where the composite genotype of rs3025892 CT and rs9792388 CA/AA showed higher risk of severe disease than any other genotypes (P = 2.77 × 10-12, proportion of severe cases = 0.24 ~ 0.29 vs. 0.09 ~ 0.18, genotypic OR = 1.96 ~ 2.70). This interaction was replicated in the Spanish cohort (P = 0.002, proportion of severe cases = 0.30 ~ 0.36 vs. 0.14 ~ 0.25, genotypic OR = 1.45 ~ 2.37) and showed enhanced significance in the meta-analysis (P = 4.97 × 10-14). Notably, these interactions indicated a possible molecular mechanism by which SARS-CoV-2 affects the nervous system. The first exhaustive genome-wide screening for epistasis improved our understanding of genetic basis underlying the severity of COVID-19.
Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Humans , COVID-19/genetics , SARS-CoV-2/genetics , Epistasis, Genetic , GenotypeABSTRACT
Given the highly variable clinical phenotype of Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19), a deeper analysis of the host genetic contribution to severe COVID-19 is important to improve our understanding of underlying disease mechanisms. Here, we describe an extended GWAS meta-analysis of a well-characterized cohort of 3,260 COVID-19 patients with respiratory failure and 12,483 population controls from Italy, Spain, Norway and Germany/Austria, including stratified analyses based on age, sex and disease severity, as well as targeted analyses of chromosome Y haplotypes, the human leukocyte antigen (HLA) region and the SARS-CoV-2 peptidome. By inversion imputation, we traced a reported association at 17q21.31 to a highly pleiotropic [~]0.9-Mb inversion polymorphism and characterized the potential effects of the inversion in detail. Our data, together with the 5th release of summary statistics from the COVID-19 Host Genetics Initiative, also identified a new locus at 19q13.33, including NAPSA, a gene which is expressed primarily in alveolar cells responsible for gas exchange in the lung.