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Host methylation predicts SARS-CoV-2 infection and clinical outcome.
- Konigsberg, Iain R;
- Barnes, Bret;
- Campbell, Monica;
- Davidson, Elizabeth;
- Zhen, Yingfei;
- Pallisard, Olivia;
- Boorgula, Meher Preethi;
- Cox, Corey;
- Nandy, Debmalya;
- Seal, Souvik;
- Crooks, Kristy;
- Sticca, Evan;
- Harrison, Genelle F;
- Hopkinson, Andrew;
- Vest, Alexis;
- Arnold, Cosby G;
- Kahn, Michael G;
- Kao, David P;
- Peterson, Brett R;
- Wicks, Stephen J;
- Ghosh, Debashis;
- Horvath, Steve;
- Zhou, Wanding;
- Mathias, Rasika A;
- Norman, Paul J;
- Porecha, Rishi;
- Yang, Ivana V;
- Gignoux, Christopher R;
- Monte, Andrew A;
- Taye, Alem;
- Barnes, Kathleen C
- et al.
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.1038/s43856-021-00042-yAbstract
Background
Since the onset of the SARS-CoV-2 pandemic, most clinical testing has focused on RT-PCR1. Host epigenome manipulation post coronavirus infection2-4 suggests that DNA methylation signatures may differentiate patients with SARS-CoV-2 infection from uninfected individuals, and help predict COVID-19 disease severity, even at initial presentation.Methods
We customized Illumina's Infinium MethylationEPIC array to enhance immune response detection and profiled peripheral blood samples from 164 COVID-19 patients with longitudinal measurements of disease severity and 296 patient controls.Results
Epigenome-wide association analysis revealed 13,033 genome-wide significant methylation sites for case-vs-control status. Genes and pathways involved in interferon signaling and viral response were significantly enriched among differentially methylated sites. We observe highly significant associations at genes previously reported in genetic association studies (e.g. IRF7, OAS1). Using machine learning techniques, models built using sparse regression yielded highly predictive findings: cross-validated best fit AUC was 93.6% for case-vs-control status, and 79.1%, 80.8%, and 84.4% for hospitalization, ICU admission, and progression to death, respectively.Conclusions
In summary, the strong COVID-19-specific epigenetic signature in peripheral blood driven by key immune-related pathways related to infection status, disease severity, and clinical deterioration provides insights useful for diagnosis and prognosis of patients with viral infections.Many UC-authored scholarly publications are freely available on this site because of the UC's open access policies. Let us know how this access is important for you.
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