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Ultra-rare RTEL1 gene variants associate with acute severity of COVID-19 and evolution to pulmonary fibrosis as a specific long COVID disorder
by
Fabbri, Gaia
, Degl’Innocenti, Andrea
, Bargagli, Elena
, Fallerini, Chiara
, d’Alessandro, Miriana
, Bergantini, Laura
, Zguro, Kristina
, Brunelli, Giulia
, Renieri, Alessandra
, Baldassarri, Margherita
in
Age
/ Analysis
/ Autoimmune diseases
/ Carbon monoxide
/ Care and treatment
/ Continuous positive airway pressure
/ Coronaviruses
/ COVID-19
/ COVID-19 - diagnosis
/ COVID-19 - genetics
/ Diagnosis
/ Disease
/ DNA Helicases - genetics
/ Evolution
/ Females
/ Fibrosis
/ Genetic variation
/ Genotype & phenotype
/ Health aspects
/ Hospitalization
/ Humans
/ Inflammation
/ Interleukin 6
/ Intubation
/ Laboratories
/ Long COVID
/ Lung
/ Lung diseases
/ Lungs
/ Machine learning
/ Males
/ Measurement
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Methods
/ Pandemics
/ Patients
/ Pneumology/Respiratory System
/ Post-Acute COVID-19 Syndrome - genetics
/ Pulmonary fibrosis
/ Pulmonary Fibrosis - diagnosis
/ Pulmonary Fibrosis - genetics
/ Regression analysis
/ Risk factors
/ RTEL1
/ SARS-CoV-2
/ Sequence analysis
/ Sequences
/ Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2
/ Software
/ Statistical analysis
/ Subgroups
/ Telomerase
/ Telomeres
/ Viral diseases
/ Whole genome sequencing
2023
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Ultra-rare RTEL1 gene variants associate with acute severity of COVID-19 and evolution to pulmonary fibrosis as a specific long COVID disorder
by
Fabbri, Gaia
, Degl’Innocenti, Andrea
, Bargagli, Elena
, Fallerini, Chiara
, d’Alessandro, Miriana
, Bergantini, Laura
, Zguro, Kristina
, Brunelli, Giulia
, Renieri, Alessandra
, Baldassarri, Margherita
in
Age
/ Analysis
/ Autoimmune diseases
/ Carbon monoxide
/ Care and treatment
/ Continuous positive airway pressure
/ Coronaviruses
/ COVID-19
/ COVID-19 - diagnosis
/ COVID-19 - genetics
/ Diagnosis
/ Disease
/ DNA Helicases - genetics
/ Evolution
/ Females
/ Fibrosis
/ Genetic variation
/ Genotype & phenotype
/ Health aspects
/ Hospitalization
/ Humans
/ Inflammation
/ Interleukin 6
/ Intubation
/ Laboratories
/ Long COVID
/ Lung
/ Lung diseases
/ Lungs
/ Machine learning
/ Males
/ Measurement
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Methods
/ Pandemics
/ Patients
/ Pneumology/Respiratory System
/ Post-Acute COVID-19 Syndrome - genetics
/ Pulmonary fibrosis
/ Pulmonary Fibrosis - diagnosis
/ Pulmonary Fibrosis - genetics
/ Regression analysis
/ Risk factors
/ RTEL1
/ SARS-CoV-2
/ Sequence analysis
/ Sequences
/ Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2
/ Software
/ Statistical analysis
/ Subgroups
/ Telomerase
/ Telomeres
/ Viral diseases
/ Whole genome sequencing
2023
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Ultra-rare RTEL1 gene variants associate with acute severity of COVID-19 and evolution to pulmonary fibrosis as a specific long COVID disorder
by
Fabbri, Gaia
, Degl’Innocenti, Andrea
, Bargagli, Elena
, Fallerini, Chiara
, d’Alessandro, Miriana
, Bergantini, Laura
, Zguro, Kristina
, Brunelli, Giulia
, Renieri, Alessandra
, Baldassarri, Margherita
in
Age
/ Analysis
/ Autoimmune diseases
/ Carbon monoxide
/ Care and treatment
/ Continuous positive airway pressure
/ Coronaviruses
/ COVID-19
/ COVID-19 - diagnosis
/ COVID-19 - genetics
/ Diagnosis
/ Disease
/ DNA Helicases - genetics
/ Evolution
/ Females
/ Fibrosis
/ Genetic variation
/ Genotype & phenotype
/ Health aspects
/ Hospitalization
/ Humans
/ Inflammation
/ Interleukin 6
/ Intubation
/ Laboratories
/ Long COVID
/ Lung
/ Lung diseases
/ Lungs
/ Machine learning
/ Males
/ Measurement
/ Medicine
/ Medicine & Public Health
/ Methods
/ Pandemics
/ Patients
/ Pneumology/Respiratory System
/ Post-Acute COVID-19 Syndrome - genetics
/ Pulmonary fibrosis
/ Pulmonary Fibrosis - diagnosis
/ Pulmonary Fibrosis - genetics
/ Regression analysis
/ Risk factors
/ RTEL1
/ SARS-CoV-2
/ Sequence analysis
/ Sequences
/ Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2
/ Software
/ Statistical analysis
/ Subgroups
/ Telomerase
/ Telomeres
/ Viral diseases
/ Whole genome sequencing
2023
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Ultra-rare RTEL1 gene variants associate with acute severity of COVID-19 and evolution to pulmonary fibrosis as a specific long COVID disorder
Journal Article
Ultra-rare RTEL1 gene variants associate with acute severity of COVID-19 and evolution to pulmonary fibrosis as a specific long COVID disorder
2023
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Overview
Background
Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) is a novel coronavirus that caused an ongoing pandemic of a pathology termed Coronavirus Disease 19 (COVID-19). Several studies reported that both COVID-19 and
RTEL1
variants are associated with shorter telomere length, but a direct association between the two is not generally acknowledged. Here we demonstrate that up to 8.6% of severe COVID-19 patients bear
RTEL1
ultra-rare variants, and show how this subgroup can be recognized.
Methods
A cohort of 2246 SARS-CoV-2-positive subjects, collected within the GEN-COVID Multicenter study, was used in this work. Whole exome sequencing analysis was performed using the NovaSeq6000 System, and machine learning methods were used for candidate gene selection of severity. A nested study, comparing severely affected patients bearing or not variants in the selected gene, was used for the characterisation of specific clinical features connected to variants in both acute and post-acute phases.
Results
Our GEN-COVID cohort revealed a total of 151 patients carrying at least one
RTEL1
ultra-rare variant, which was selected as a specific acute severity feature. From a clinical point of view, these patients showed higher liver function indices, as well as increased CRP and inflammatory markers, such as IL-6. Moreover, compared to control subjects, they present autoimmune disorders more frequently. Finally, their decreased diffusion lung capacity for carbon monoxide after six months of COVID-19 suggests that
RTEL1
variants can contribute to the development of SARS-CoV-2-elicited lung fibrosis.
Conclusion
RTEL1
ultra-rare variants can be considered as a predictive marker of COVID-19 severity, as well as a marker of pathological evolution in pulmonary fibrosis in the post-COVID phase. This notion can be used for a rapid screening in hospitalized infected people, for vaccine prioritization, and appropriate follow-up assessment for subjects at risk.
Trial Registration
NCT04549831 (
www.clinicaltrial.org
)
Publisher
BioMed Central,BioMed Central Ltd,Nature Publishing Group,BMC
Subject
/ Analysis
/ Continuous positive airway pressure
/ COVID-19
/ Disease
/ Females
/ Fibrosis
/ Humans
/ Lung
/ Lungs
/ Males
/ Medicine
/ Methods
/ Patients
/ Pneumology/Respiratory System
/ Post-Acute COVID-19 Syndrome - genetics
/ Pulmonary Fibrosis - diagnosis
/ Pulmonary Fibrosis - genetics
/ RTEL1
/ Severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus 2
/ Software
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