Author:
Zhu Huanhuan,Zheng Fang,Li Linxuan,Jin Yan,Luo Yuxue,Li Zhen,Zeng JingYu,Tang Ling,Li Zilong,Xia Ningyu,Liu Panhong,Han Dan,Shan Ying,Zhu Xiaoying,Liu Siyang,Xie Rong,Chen Yilin,Liu Wen,Liu Longqi,Xu Xun,Wang Jian,Yang Huanming,Shen Xia,Jin Xin,Cheng Fanjun
Abstract
AbstractAs of early May 2021, the ongoing pandemic COVID-19 has caused over 160 million of infections and over 3 million deaths worldwide. Many risk factors, such as age, gender, and comorbidities, have been studied to explain the variable symptoms of infected patients. However, these effects may not fully account for the diversity in disease severity. Here, we present a comprehensive analysis of a broad range of patients’ laboratory and clinical assessments to investigate the genetic contributions to COVID-19 severity. By performing GWAS analysis, we discovered several concrete associations for laboratory features. Based on these findings, we performed Mendelian randomization (MR) analysis to investigate the causality of laboratory traits on disease severity. From the MR study, we identified two causal traits, cholesterol levels and WBC counts. The functional gene related to cholesterol levels is ApoE and people with particular ApoE genotype are more likely to have higher cholesterol levels, facilitating the process that SARS-CoV-2 binds on its receptor ACE2 and aggravating COVID-19 disease. The functional gene related to WBC counts is MHC system that plays a central role in the immune system. The host immune response to the SARS-CoV-2 infection greatly affects the patients’ severity status and clinical outcome. Additionally, our gene-based and GSEA analysis revealed interferon pathways, including type I interferon receptor binding, regulation of IFNA signaling, and SARS coronavirus and innate immunity. We hope that our work will make a contribution in studying the genetic mechanisms of disease illness and serve as useful reference for the clinical diagnosis and treatment of COVID-19.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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