Regulatory Noncoding and Predicted Pathogenic Coding Variants of CCR5 Predispose to Severe COVID-19

Author:

Cantalupo SuevaORCID,Lasorsa Vito Alessandro,Russo RobertaORCID,Andolfo Immacolata,D’Alterio Giuseppe,Rosato Barbara Eleni,Frisso GiuliaORCID,Abete Pasquale,Cassese Gian Marco,Servillo Giuseppe,Gentile Ivan,Piscopo Carmelo,Della Monica Matteo,Fiorentino Giuseppe,Russo Giuseppe,Cerino Pellegrino,Buonerba Carlo,Pierri BiancamariaORCID,Zollo MassimoORCID,Iolascon AchilleORCID,Capasso MarioORCID

Abstract

Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) found locus 3p21.31 associated with severe COVID-19. CCR5 resides at the same locus and, given its known biological role in other infection diseases, we investigated if common noncoding and rare coding variants, affecting CCR5, can predispose to severe COVID-19. We combined single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) that met the suggestive significance level (P ≤ 1 × 10−5) at the 3p21.31 locus in public GWAS datasets (6406 COVID-19 hospitalized patients and 902,088 controls) with gene expression data from 208 lung tissues, Hi-C, and Chip-seq data. Through whole exome sequencing (WES), we explored rare coding variants in 147 severe COVID-19 patients. We identified three SNPs (rs9845542, rs12639314, and rs35951367) associated with severe COVID-19 whose risk alleles correlated with low CCR5 expression in lung tissues. The rs35951367 resided in a CTFC binding site that interacts with CCR5 gene in lung tissues and was confirmed to be associated with severe COVID-19 in two independent datasets. We also identified a rare coding variant (rs34418657) associated with the risk of developing severe COVID-19. Our results suggest a biological role of CCR5 in the progression of COVID-19 as common and rare genetic variants can increase the risk of developing severe COVID-19 by affecting the functions of CCR5.

Funder

“CEINGE TASK-FORCE COVID19”, Regione Campania

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Inorganic Chemistry,Organic Chemistry,Physical and Theoretical Chemistry,Computer Science Applications,Spectroscopy,Molecular Biology,General Medicine,Catalysis

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