Disease areas:
  • reproductive and urinary health
Last updated:
Author(s):
Walt E. Adamson, Harry Noyes, Paul Johnson, Anneli Cooper, Darren G. Monckton, John Ogunsola, Georgia Beckett-Hill, Michael Sullivan, Patrick Mark, Rulan S. Parekh, Annette MacLeod
Publish date:
14 February 2024
Journal:
EBioMedicine
PubMed ID:
38360481

Abstract

BACKGROUND: APOL1 variants G1 and G2 are common in populations with recent African ancestry. They are associated with protection from African sleeping sickness, however homozygosity or compound heterozygosity for these variants is associated with chronic kidney disease (CKD) and related conditions. What is not clear is the extent of associations with non-kidney-related disorders, and whether there are clusters of diseases associated with individual APOL1 genotypes.

METHODS: Using a cohort of 7462 UK Biobank participants with recent African ancestry, we conducted a phenome-wide association study investigating associations between individual APOL1 genotypes and conditions identified by the International Classification of Disease phenotypes.

FINDINGS: We identified 27 potential associations between individual APOL1 genotypes and a diverse range of conditions. G1/G2 compound heterozygotes were specifically associated with 26 of these conditions (all deleteriously), with an over-representation of infectious diseases (including hospitalisation and death resulting from COVID-19). The analysis also exposed complexities in the relationship between APOL1 and CKD that are not evident when risk variants are grouped together: G1 homozygosity, G2 homozygosity, and G1/G2 compound heterozygosity were each shown to be associated with distinct CKD phenotypes. The multi-locus nature of the G1/G2 genotype means that its associations would go undetected in a standard genome-wide association study.

INTERPRETATION: Our findings have implications for understanding health risks and better-targeted detection, intervention, and therapeutic strategies, particularly in populations where APOL1 G1 and G2 are common such as in sub-Saharan Africa and its diaspora.

FUNDING: This study was funded by the Wellcome Trust (209511/Z/17/Z) and H3Africa (H3A/18/004).

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Institution:
University of Glasgow, Great Britain

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