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

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 COV...

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Veröffentlicht in:Signal transduction and targeted therapy 2022-04, Vol.7 (1), p.112-112, Article 112
Hauptverfasser: Gong, Bo, Huang, Lulin, He, Yongquan, Xie, Wen, Yin, Yi, Shi, Yi, Xiao, Jialing, Zhong, Ling, Zhang, Yi, Jiang, Zhilin, Hao, Fang, Zhou, Yu, Li, Huan, Jiang, Li, Yang, Xingxiang, Song, Xiangrong, Kang, Yan, Tuo, Lin, Huang, Yi, Shuai, Ping, Liu, Yuping, Zheng, Fang, Yang, Zhenglin
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung: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.
ISSN:2059-3635
2095-9907
2059-3635
DOI:10.1038/s41392-022-00923-1