Author:
Badla Beshr Abdulaziz,Hanifa Mohamed Samer,Jain Ruchi,Naofal Maha El,Halabi Nour,Yaslam Sawsan,Ramaswamy Sathishkumar,Taylor Alan,Alfalasi Roudha,Shenbagam Shruti,Khansaheb Hamda,Al Suwaidi Hanan,Nowotny Norbert,Popatia Rizwana,Al Khayat Abdulla,Alsheikh-Ali Alawi,Loney Tom,AlDabal Laila Mohamed,Abou Tayoun Ahmad
Abstract
AbstractStudies of genetic factors associated with severe COVID-19 in young adults have been limited in non-Caucasian populations. Here, we clinically characterize a case series of patients with COVID-19, who were otherwise healthy, young adults (N = 55; mean age 34.1 ± SD 5.0 years) from 16 Asian, Middle Eastern, and North African countries. Using whole exome sequencing, we identify rare, likely deleterious variants affecting 16 immune-related genes in 17 out of 55 patients (31%), including 7 patients (41% of all carriers or 12.7% of all patients) who harbored multiple such variants mainly in interferon and toll-like receptor genes. Protein network analysis as well as transcriptomic analysis of nasopharyngeal swabs from an independent COVID-19 cohort (N = 50; 42% Asians and 22% Arabs) revealed that most of the altered genes, as identified by whole exome sequencing, and the associated molecular pathways were significantly altered in COVID-19 patients. Genetic variants tended to be associated with mortality, intensive care admission, and ventilation support. Our clinical cases series, genomic and transcriptomic findings suggest a possible role for interferon pathway genes in severe COVID-19 and highlight the importance of extending genetic studies to diverse populations to better understand the human genetics of disease.
Funder
Al Jalila Foundation, Dubai, United Arab Emirates.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
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