Genetic regulation of OAS1 nonsense-mediated decay underlies association with risk of severe COVID-19

Author:

Banday A Rouf,Stanifer Megan L,Florez-Vargas Oscar,Onabajo Olusegun O,Zahoor Muhammad A,Papenberg Brenen W,Ring Timothy J,Lee Chia-Han,Andreakos Evangelos,Arons Evgeny,Barsh Greg,Biesecker Leslie G,Boyle David L,Burnett-Hartman Andrea,Carrington Mary,Chang Euijin,Choe Pyoeng Gyun,Chrisholm Rex L,Dalgard Clifton,Edberg Jeff,Erdmann Nathan,Feigelson Heather S,Firestein Gary S,Gehring Adam J,Ho Michelle,Holland Steven,Hutchinson Amy A,Im Hogune,Ison Michael G,Kim Hong Bin,Kreitman Robert J,Korf Bruce R,Mirabello Lisa,Pacheco Jennifer A,Peluso Michael J,Rader Daniel J,Redden David T,Ritchie Marylyn D,Rosenbloom Brooke,Sant Anna Hanaisa P,Savage Sharon,Siouti Eleni,Triantafyllia Vasiliki,Vargas Joselin M,Verma Anurag,Vij Vibha,Wesemann Duane R,Yeager Meredith,Yu Xu,Zhang Yu,Boulant Steeve,Chanock Stephen J,Feld Jordan J,Prokunina-Olsson LudmilaORCID

Abstract

ABSTRACTGenomic regions have been associated with COVID-19 susceptibility and outcomes, including the chr12q24.13 locus encoding antiviral proteins OAS1-3. Here, we report genetic, functional, and clinical insights into genetic associations within this locus. In Europeans, the risk of hospitalized vs. non-hospitalized COVID-19 was associated with a single 19Kb-haplotype comprised of 76 OAS1 variants included in a 95% credible set within a large genomic fragment introgressed from Neandertals. The risk haplotype was also associated with impaired spontaneous but not treatment-induced SARS-CoV-2 clearance in a clinical trial with pegIFN-λ1. We demonstrate that two exonic variants, rs10774671 and rs1131454, affect splicing and nonsense-mediated decay of OAS1. We suggest that genetically-regulated loss of OAS1 expression contributes to impaired spontaneous clearance of SARS-CoV-2 and elevated risk of hospitalization for COVID-19. Our results provide the rationale for further clinical studies using interferons to compensate for impaired spontaneous SARS-CoV-2 clearance, particularly in carriers of the OAS1 risk haplotypes.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Reference39 articles.

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