Differential Circulating Proteomic Responses Associated with Ancestry during Severe COVID-19 Infection.

Publication date: Jul 16, 2025

COVID-19 led to a disruption in nearly all aspects of society, yet these impacts were not the same across populations. During the pandemic, it became apparent that ancestry was associated with COVID-19 severity and morbidity. This study examines the differential circulating protein levels between three continental ancestries in response to severe COVID-19 infection. 4979 circulating proteins from 1272 samples were measured using the SomaScan platform. We used a linear mixed model to assess the ancestry-specific association between protein levels and severe COVID-19 illness. Comparing ancestries, we found that 62% of the tested proteins are associated with severe COVID-19 infectionin European-ancestry individuals, compared to 45% and 22% of the tested proteins between COVID-19-infected and control individuals in people of African and East Asian ancestry, respectively, likely reflecting differences in sample sizes. We found that all ancestries had strong correlations between each other with individuals of European and African ancestry having the most similar response and European and East Asian ancestries having the least similar. However, we did find 39 unique proteins that responded differently (FDR

Concepts Keywords
African ancestry
Covid ancestry differences
Pandemic BQC19
COVID-19
COVID-19 response
high-throughput proteomics
linear mixed models
proteomics

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH Long Covid
disease IDO protein
disease MESH morbidity
disease MESH Infection
disease MESH COVID-19

Original Article

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