Molecular Profile of Variants Potentially Associated with Severe Forms of COVID-19 in Amazonian Indigenous Populations.
Rita de Cássia Calderaro CoelhoCarlliane Lima E Lins Pinto MartinsLucas Favacho PastanaJuliana Carla Gomes RodriguesKaio Evandro Cardoso AguiarAmanda de Nazaré Cohen-PaesLaura Patrícia Albarello GellenFrancisco Cezar Aquino de MoraesMaria Clara Leite CalderaroLetícia Almeida de AssunçãoNatasha MonteEsdras Edgar Batista PereiraAndré Maurício Ribeiro-Dos-SantosÂndrea Kely Campos Ribeiro Dos SantosRommel Mario Rodríguez BurbanoSandro José de SouzaJoão Farias GuerreiroPaulo Pimentel de AssumpçãoSidney Emanuel Batista Dos SantosMarianne Rodrigues FernandesNey Pereira Carneiro Dos SantosPublished in: Viruses (2024)
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) is an infection caused by SARS-CoV-2. Genome-wide association studies (GWASs) have suggested a strong association of genetic factors with the severity of the disease. However, many of these studies have been completed in European populations, and little is known about the genetic variability of indigenous peoples' underlying infection by SARS-CoV-2. The objective of the study is to investigate genetic variants present in the genes AQP3 , ARHGAP27 , ELF5L , IFNAR2 , LIMD1 , OAS1 and UPK1A, selected due to their association with the severity of COVID-19, in a sample of indigenous people from the Brazilian Amazon in order to describe potential new and already studied variants. We performed the complete sequencing of the exome of 64 healthy indigenous people from the Brazilian Amazon. The allele frequency data of the population were compared with data from other continental populations. A total of 66 variants present in the seven genes studied were identified, including a variant with a high impact on the ARHGAP27 gene (rs201721078) and three new variants located in the Amazon Indigenous populations (INDG) present in the AQP3 , IFNAR2 and LIMD1 genes, with low, moderate and modifier impact, respectively.
Keyphrases
- sars cov
- copy number
- genome wide
- coronavirus disease
- respiratory syndrome coronavirus
- dna methylation
- genome wide identification
- electronic health record
- genome wide association
- genetic diversity
- bioinformatics analysis
- big data
- early onset
- high intensity
- genome wide analysis
- case control
- machine learning
- single molecule
- artificial intelligence
- transcription factor