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Impact of natural selection on global patterns of genetic variation, and association with clinical phenotypes, at genes involved in SARS-CoV-2 infection

Authors :
T. Nyambo
Dawit Wolde Meskel
Gaonyadiwe G. Mokone
Sununguko Wata Mpoloka
Jibril Hirbo
Alfred K. Njamnshi
Charles Fokunang
Sabah A. Omar
Michael A. McQuillan
Cesar de la Fuente Nunez
Scott M. Williams
Anastasia Lucas
Daniel J. Rader
Sarah A. Tishkoff
Simon Thompson
Matthew E. B. Hansen
Meghan A. Rubel
William Beggs
Michael Campbell
Gurja Belay
Joseph Park
Marcelo C. R. Melo
Anurag Verma
Giorgio Sirugo
Yuanqing Feng
Chao Zhang
Alessia Ranciaro
Marylyn D. Ritchie
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.

Abstract

We investigated global patterns of genetic variation and signatures of natural selection at host genes relevant to SARS-CoV-2 infection (ACE2, TMPRSS2, DPP4,andLY6E). We analyzed novel data from 2,012 ethnically diverse Africans and 15,997 individuals of European and African ancestry with electronic health records, and integrated with global data from the 1000GP. AtACE2,we identified 41 non-synonymous variants that were rare in most populations, several of which impact protein function. However, three non-synonymous variants were common among Central African hunter-gatherers from Cameroon and are on haplotypes that exhibit signatures of positive selection. We identify strong signatures of selection impacting variation at regulatory regions influencingACE2expression in multiple African populations. AtTMPRSS2, we identified 13 amino acid changes that are adaptive and specific to the human lineage. Genetic variants that are targets of natural selection are associated with clinical phenotypes common in patients with COVID-19.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........45794542197dd57d65f05ba5a69c0e43