High-risk Covid gene more common in South Asians

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University of Oxford scientists have uncovered a gene that doubles the risk of lung failure and death from Covid.

They say around 60% of people from South Asian backgrounds and 15% of people of European ancestry carry the high-risk version of the gene.

Vaccines are key and help significantly reduce these risks, researchers say.

The Nature Genetics study sheds light, external on why some communities in the UK and South Asia are at higher risk from Covid - but does not fully explain it.

Building on previous genetic work, researchers used a combination of artificial intelligence and new molecular technology to pinpoint the exact gene - called LZTFL1 - responsible for the increased risks.

They estimate the risky version of the gene is present in about 2% of people from African-Caribbean backgrounds and 1.8% of people of East Asian descent.

Lead researcher Prof James Davies said the discovery that the risky gene does not affect all populations equally was very important.

But he said a complex mix of factors - including age in particular - contributed to each person's individual risk.

He added "Socio-economic factors were also likely to be important in explaining why some communities have been particularly badly affected by the pandemic.

"Although we cannot change our genetics, our results show that the people with the higher risk gene are likely to particularly benefit from vaccination."

'Derailing defences'

Researchers believe the risky version of the gene makes people's lungs more susceptible to coronavirus.

They hypothesise that the high-risk gene derails a key protective mechanism that cells lining the lungs normally employ to defend themselves from Covid.

When cells lining the lung interact with coronavirus, one of their defence strategies is to turn into less specialised cells and become less welcoming to the virus.

This despecialisation process reduces the amount on the surface of cells of a key protein called ACE-2, which is key to coronavirus attaching itself to cells.

But for people with the risky version of the LZTFL1 gene this process does not work as well, and lung cells are left vulnerable to invasion of the virus.

Scientists say it is significant that the gene involved affects the lungs, but does not have an impact on the immune system.

This means people at high risk can still get immune protection from the vaccine, they say.

And scientists hope the discovery helps lead to new customised drugs that focus on the lungs - current ones focus mostly on the immune system.

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