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GWAS Study

A genetic variant in IL-6 lowering its expression is protective for critical patients with COVID-19.

Gong B, Huang L, He Y et al.

35368020 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
3653 Participants
85 Views
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

GB
Gong B
HL
Huang L
HY
He Y
XW
Xie W
YY
Yin Y
SY
Shi Y
XJ
Xiao J
ZL
Zhong L
ZY
Zhang Y
JZ
Jiang Z
HF
Hao F
ZY
Zhou Y
LH
Li H
JL
Jiang L
YX
Yang X
SX
Song X
KY
Kang Y
TL
Tuo L
HY
Huang Y
SP
Shuai P
LY
Liu Y
ZF
Zheng F
YZ
Yang Z
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Critical coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is associated with high mortality and potential genetic factors have been reported to be involved in the development of critical COVID-19. We performed a genome-wide association study to identify the genetic factors responsible for developing critical COVID-19. 632 critical patients with COVID-19 and 3021 healthy controls from the Chinese population were recruited. First, we identified a genome-wide significant difference of IL-6 rs2069837 (p = 9.73 × 10-15, OR = 0.41) between 437 critical patients with COVID-19 and 2551 normal controls in the discovery cohort. When replicated these findings in a set of 195 patients with critical COVID-19 and 470 healthy controls, we detected significant association of rs2069837 with COVID-19 (p = 8.89 × 10-3, OR = 0.67). This variant surpassed the formal threshold for genome-wide significance (combined p = 4.64 × 10-16, OR = 0.49). Further analysis revealed that there was a significantly stronger expression of IL-6 in the serum from patients with critical COVID-19 than in that from patients with asymptomatic COVID-19. An in vitro assay showed that the A to G allele changes in rs2069837 within IL-6 obviously decreased the luciferase expression activity. When analyzing the effect of this variant on the IL-6 in the serum based on the rs2069837 genotype, we found that the A to G variation in rs2069837 decreased the expression of IL-6, especially in the male. Overall, we identified a genetic variant in IL-6 that protects against critical conditions with COVID-19 though decreasing IL-6 expression in the serum.

437 Chinese ancestry cases, 2,551 Chinese ancestry controls

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

3653
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
Yes
Replicated
195 Chinese ancestry cases, 470 Chinese ancestry controls
Replication Participants
East Asian
Ancestry
China
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

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