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Age-dependent effect of the IFIH1/MDA5 gene variants on the risk of critical COVID-19.

María G Muñiz-BanciellaGuillermo M AlbaicetaLaura Amado-RodríguezEstefanía Salgado Del RiegoInés López AlonsoCecilia López-MartínezPaula Martín-VicenteMarta García-ClementeTamara Hermida-ValverdeAna I Enríquez-RodriguezCristina Hernández-GonzálezElías Cuesta-LlavonaVictoria AlvarezJuan GómezEliecer Coto
Published in: Immunogenetics (2022)
MDA5, encoded by the IFIH1gene, is a cytoplasmic sensor of viral RNAs that triggers interferon (IFN) antiviral responses. Common and rare IFIH1 variants have been associated with the risk of type 1 diabetes and other immune-mediated disorders, and with the outcome of viral diseases. Variants associated with reduced IFN expression would increase the risk for severe viral disease. The MDA5/IFN pathway would play a critical role in the response to SARS-CoV-2 infection mediating the extent and severity of COVID-19. Here, we genotyped a cohort of 477 patients with critical ICU COVID-19 (109 death) for three IFIH1 functional variants: rs1990760 (p.Ala946Thr), rs35337543 (splicing variant, intron 8 + 1G > C), and rs35744605 (p.Glu627Stop). The main finding of our study was a significant increased frequency of rs1990760 C-carriers in early-onset patients (< 65 years) (p = 0.01; OR = 1.64, 95%CI = 1.18-2.43). This variant was also increased in critical vs. no-ICU patients and in critical vs. asymptomatic controls. The rs35744605 C variant was associated with increased blood IL6 levels at ICU admission. The rare rs35337543 splicing variant showed a trend toward protection from early-onset critical COVID-19. In conclusion, IFIH1 variants associated with reduced gene expression and lower IFN response might contribute to develop critical COVID-19 with an age-dependent effect.
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