Department of Medical Sciences, Genome Medicine Laboratory, Institute of Biomedicine-iBiMED, University of Aveiro, Aveiro, Portugal.
Lab3R-Respiratory Research and Rehabilitation, School for Health Sciences (ESSUA) and Institute of Biomedicine (iBiMED), University of Aveiro, Aveiro, Portugal.
PLoS One. 2022 Feb 23;17(2):e0264009. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0264009. eCollection 2022.
Populations seem to respond differently to the global pandemic of severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2. Recent studies show individual variability in both susceptibility and clinical response to COVID-19 infection. People with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) constitute one of COVID-19 risk groups, being already associated with a poor prognosis upon infection. This study aims contributing to unveil the underlying reasons for such prognosis in people with COPD and the variability in the response observed across worldwide populations, by looking at the genetic background as a possible answer to COVID-19 infection response heterogeneity.
SNPs already associated with susceptibility to COVID-19 infection (rs286914 and rs12329760) and severe COVID-19 with respiratory failure (rs657152 and rs11385942) were assessed and their allelic frequencies used to calculate the probability of having multiple risk alleles. This was performed on a Portuguese case-control COPD cohort, previously clinically characterized and genotyped from saliva samples, and also on worldwide populations (European, Spanish, Italian, African, American and Asian), using publicly available frequencies data. A polygenic risk analysis was also conducted on the Portuguese COPD cohort for the two mentioned phenotypes, and also for hospitalization and survival to COVID-19 infection.
No differences in genetic risk for COVID-19 susceptibility, hospitalization, severity or survival were found between people with COPD and the control group (all p-values > 0.01), either considering risk alleles individually, allelic combinations or polygenic risk scores. All populations, even those with European ancestry (Portuguese, Spanish and Italian), showed significant differences from the European population in genetic risk for both COVID-19 susceptibility and severity (all p-values < 0.0001).
Our results indicate a low genetic contribution for COVID-19 infection predisposition or worse outcomes observed in people with COPD. Also, our study unveiled a high genetic heterogeneity across major world populations for the same alleles, even within European sub-populations, demonstrating the need to build a higher resolution European genetic map, so that differences in the distribution of relevant alleles can be easily accessed and used to better manage diseases, ultimately, safeguarding populations with higher genetic predisposition to such diseases.
人群似乎对严重急性呼吸综合征冠状病毒 2 型(SARS-CoV-2)的全球大流行有不同的反应。最近的研究表明,COVID-19 感染的易感性和临床反应存在个体差异。慢性阻塞性肺疾病(COPD)患者构成 COVID-19 的一个高危人群,他们在感染后预后较差。本研究旨在通过研究遗传背景作为 COVID-19 感染反应异质性的可能答案,揭示 COPD 患者预后不良的潜在原因以及全球人群观察到的反应变异性。
评估了与 COVID-19 感染易感性(rs286914 和 rs12329760)和伴有呼吸衰竭的严重 COVID-19(rs657152 和 rs11385942)相关的单核苷酸多态性(SNP),并使用等位基因频率计算具有多个风险等位基因的概率。这是在一个葡萄牙病例对照 COPD 队列中进行的,该队列先前已从唾液样本中进行了临床特征分析和基因分型,并且还在全球人群(欧洲、西班牙、意大利、非洲、美国和亚洲)中使用了公开的频率数据。还对葡萄牙 COPD 队列进行了两种表型(住院和 COVID-19 感染生存)的多基因风险分析。
在 COPD 患者和对照组之间,无论考虑单个风险等位基因、等位基因组合还是多基因风险评分,都没有发现 COVID-19 易感性、住院、严重程度或生存的遗传风险差异(所有 p 值均>0.01)。所有人群,甚至那些具有欧洲血统(葡萄牙人、西班牙人和意大利人),在 COVID-19 易感性和严重程度的遗传风险方面都与欧洲人群存在显著差异(所有 p 值均<0.0001)。
我们的结果表明,COVID-19 感染易感性或 COPD 患者预后不良的遗传贡献较低。此外,我们的研究揭示了主要世界人群中同一等位基因的遗传高度异质性,即使在欧洲亚群中也是如此,这表明需要构建更高分辨率的欧洲遗传图谱,以便轻松访问和利用相关等位基因分布的差异,从而更好地管理疾病,最终保护易患此类疾病的人群。