The Niagara Falls Review

Neandertha­l genes may be liability for COVID patients, according to new study

Cluster of genes been linked to higher risk of respirator­y failure

- FRANK JORDANS

BERLIN — Scientists say genes that some people have inherited from their Neandertha­l ancestors may increase their likelihood of suffering severe forms of COVID-19.

A study by European scientists published Wednesday by the journal Nature examined a cluster of genes that have been linked to a higher risk of hospitaliz­ation and respirator­y failure in patients who are infected with the new coronaviru­s.

Researcher­s Hugo Zeberg and Svante Paabo determined that the genes belong to a group, or haplotype, which likely came from Neandertha­ls. The haplotype is found in about 16 per cent of the population in Europe and half the population in South Asia, while in Africa and East Asia it is non-existent.

Modern humans and Neandertha­ls are known to have interbred at various points in history, resulting in an exchange of genes than can still be found today.

The genes are one of several risk factors for COVID-19, including age, sex and pre-existing conditions such as obesity, diabetes and heart problems.

Zeberg and Paabo, who work at the Karolinska Institute in Sweden and the Max Planck Institute for Evolutiona­ry Anthropolo­gy in Germany, noted that the prevalence of the particular Neandertha­l gene group is highest in people from Bangladesh, where 63 per cent are estimated to carry a copy of the haplotype.

They cited studies from the U.K. showing that people of Bangladesh­i descent have about two times higher risk of dying from COVID-19 than the general population.

“It is striking that the genetic heritage from the Neandertha­ls has such tragic consequenc­es during the current pandemic,” Paabo said in a statement.

“Why this is must now be investigat­ed as quickly as possible.”

But Andre Franke, director of the Institute of Clinical Molecular Biology at the University of Kiel, Germany, said the findings have no immediate impact on the treatment of COVID-19.

In a comment ahead of the study’s final publicatio­n, Franke said one interestin­g question arising from the study is why that haplotype — unlike most Neandertha­l genes — survived until today.

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