Mendelian randomization analysis suggests no associations of herpes simplex virus infections with systemic lupus erythematosus

Author:

Chang Min‐Jing12ORCID,Liu Meng‐Ting1,Chen Miao‐Ran2,Li Nan2,Zhao Yu‐Hui2,Zhang Sheng‐Xiao23,He Pei‐Feng1,Yu Qi4

Affiliation:

1. Shanxi Key Laboratory of Big Data for Clinical Decision Shanxi Medical University Taiyuan China

2. Ministry of Education, Key Laboratory of Cellular Physiology Shanxi Medical University Taiyuan China

3. Department of Rheumatology Second Hospital of Shanxi Medical University Taiyuan China

4. School of Management Shanxi Medical University Taiyuan China

Abstract

AbstractSystemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) characterized by immune dysfunction is possibly more vulnerable to herpes simplex virus (HSV) infection. The infection has been intensively considered a common onset and exacerbation of SLE. This study is aimed at elucidating the causal association between SLE and HSV. A bidirectional two‐sample Mendelian Randomization (TSMR) analysis was systematically conducted to explore the causal effect of SLE and HSV on each other. The causality was estimated by inverse variance weighted (IVW), MR‐Egger and weighted median methods based on the summary‐level genome‐wide association studies (GWAS) data from a publicly available database. Genetically proxied HSV infection exhibited no causal association with SLE in the forward MR analysis using IVW method (odds ratio [OR] = 0.987; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 0.891–1.093; p = 0.798), nor did HSV‐1 IgG (OR = 1.241; 95% CI: 0.874–1.762; p = 0.227) and HSV‐2 IgG (OR = 0.934; 95% CI: 0.821–1.062; p = 0.297). Similar null results with HSV infection (OR = 1.021; 95% CI: 0.986–1.057; p = 0.245), HSV‐1 IgG (OR = 1.003; 95% CI: 0.982–1.024; p = 0.788) and HSV‐2 IgG (OR = 1.034; 95% CI: 0.991–1.080; p = 0.121) were observed in the reverse MR where SLE served as the exposure. Our study demonstrated no causal association between the genetically predicted HSV and SLE.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Infectious Diseases,Virology

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