Author(s):
David, Susana ; Castro, Liliana ; Duarte, Elsa ; Gaspar, Ulisses ; Rodrigues, Maria Rosário da Costa ; Cueto-Rojo, Maria Vanessa ; Mendonça, Joana ; Ferrão, José ; Machado, Miguel ; Poças, José ; Lavinha, João ; Vieira, Luís ; Santos, Ana Sofia
Date: 2025
Persistent ID: http://hdl.handle.net/10400.18/10592
Origin: Repositório Científico do Instituto Nacional de Saúde
Subject(s): Chronic Q fever; IFNGR2; IFN-γ signaling; Candidate Gene Association Study; Haplotype; Next Generation Sequencing; Chronic Disease; Infecções Sistémicas e Zoonoses
Description
Q fever is a highly contagious zoonosis capable of causing large outbreaks of important health and economic consequences. Host genetic factors are believed to influence the development of severe chronic Q fever following the infection by the etiological agent, Coxiella burnetii. Targetted next generation sequencing (NGS) was performed in a case-control genetic association study on 53 confirmed Q fever cases, including 38 compatible with acute and 15 with chronic disease, and 29 samples from the general Portuguese population. Four SNPs in the IFNGR2 locus, rs78407108 G > A, rs17879956 C > T, rs7277167 C > T, and rs9974603 C > A, showed a statistically significant association to chronic Q fever, resisting the Bonferroni correction. These belonged to haplotypes significantly associated with chronic Q fever. The individual SNPs are referenced in the GTEx database as possible eQTLs. Given the direct bearing of IFNGR2 on IFN-γ signaling, the possible involvement of the associated variants with higher IFNGR2 expression could be in line with observations suggesting that IFN-γ production in chronic Q fever patients is significantly higher than in healthy controls. Further investigations are required to clarify the role of IFNGR2 signaling in association with chronic Q fever.