Role of Genetic Variants AGT rs699 and ACE2 rs2106809 in Increasing the Risk and Severity of COVID-19 Infection in Iraqi Patients

Authors

  • Ghazwan Faisal Hussein Department of Biology College of Science, University of Babylon, Babil Governorate, Hillah, Iraq. https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8680-3709
  • Ali Hmood Al Saadi Department of Biology College of Science, University of Babylon, Babil Governorate, Hillah, Iraq.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.24996/ijs.2024.65.4.12

Keywords:

COVID-19, AS-PCR, ACE2, AGT, Polymorphisms

Abstract

     The main aim of our study was to determine if the ACE2 rs2106809 and AGT rs699 polymorphisms increase the risk and severity of Covid-19 infection in Iraqi patients. This case-control study included 102 patients (mean age 52.66±18.82 years) and 92 healthy (mean age 37.88±14.19 years). The patients were grouped based on severity: hospitalized (n = 57) and non-hospitalized (n = 45). Demographic and comorbidity data was also collected. Genotype distribution of two selected SNPs ACE2 gene rs2106809 and AGT rs699 polymorphisms was performed by allele-specific PCR (AS-PCR) and sanger sequencing. The ACE2 rs2106809 C allele was associated to an increased risk of Covid-19 infection and the severity in males but not in the females (C vs. T OR = 3.04 p=0.01 and C vs. T OR = 4.9, p = 0.03, respectively). While AGT rs699 TC genotype was associated with 2.96 folds higher risk of Covid-19 infection (TC vs.TT, CC OR =2.96, 95%CI = 1.12–6.44; p = 0.02).  The AGT rs699 was not associated with the severity of infection. Among outpatients, benign conditions were associated with a lower risk, however older age males and comorbidities increased the risk. We concluded that the genetic variant of rs2106809 ACE2 in males was significant with a risk of infection and severe clinical course because it could be located on the X-chromosome, and at the same time AGT rs699 polymorphism had an impact on the increased risk of Covid-19 but had no relation with the severity of Covid-19.

Author Biography

Ali Hmood Al Saadi, Department of Biology College of Science, University of Babylon, Babil Governorate, Hillah, Iraq.

 

 

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Published

2024-04-30

Issue

Section

Biology

How to Cite

Role of Genetic Variants AGT rs699 and ACE2 rs2106809 in Increasing the Risk and Severity of COVID-19 Infection in Iraqi Patients. (2024). Iraqi Journal of Science, 65(4), 1917-1928. https://doi.org/10.24996/ijs.2024.65.4.12

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