A Neanderthal OAS1 isoform protects individuals of European ancestry against COVID-19 susceptibility and severity

Sirui Zhou(Jewish General Hospital), Guillaume Butler‐Laporte(Jewish General Hospital), Tomoko Nakanishi(Japan Society for the Promotion of Science), David Morrison(Jewish General Hospital), Jonathan Afilalo(Jewish General Hospital), Marc Afilalo(Jewish General Hospital), Lætitia Laurent(Jewish General Hospital), Maik Pietzner(University of Cambridge), Nicola D. Kerrison(University of Cambridge), Kaiqiong Zhao(Jewish General Hospital), Elsa Brunet‐Ratnasingham(Centre Hospitalier de l’Université de Montréal), Danielle Henry(Jewish General Hospital), Nofar Kimchi(Jewish General Hospital), Zaman Afrasiabi(Jewish General Hospital), Nardin Rezk(Jewish General Hospital), Meriem Bouab(Jewish General Hospital), Louis Petitjean(Jewish General Hospital), Charlotte Guzman(Jewish General Hospital), Xiaoqing Xue(Jewish General Hospital), Chris Tselios(Jewish General Hospital), Branka Vulesevic(Jewish General Hospital), Olumide Adeleye(Jewish General Hospital), Tala Abdullah(Jewish General Hospital), Noor Almamlouk(Jewish General Hospital), Yiheng Chen(Jewish General Hospital), Michaël Chassé(Centre Hospitalier de l’Université de Montréal), Madéleine Durand(Centre Hospitalier de l’Université de Montréal), Clare Paterson(SomaLogic (United States)), Johan Normark(Umeå University), Robert Frithiof(Uppsala University), Miklós Lipcsey(Uppsala University), Michael Hultström(Uppsala University), Celia M.T. Greenwood(Jewish General Hospital), Hugo Zeberg(Karolinska Institutet), Claudia Langenberg(University of Cambridge), Elin Thysell(Umeå University), Michaël Pollak(Jewish General Hospital), Vincent Mooser(McGill University), Vincenzo Forgetta(Jewish General Hospital), Daniel E. Kaufmann(Centre Hospitalier de l’Université de Montréal), J. Brent Richards(King's College London)
Nature Medicine
February 25, 2021
Cited by 299Open Access
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