Behavioral Risk Exposure and Host Genetics of Susceptibility to HIV‐1 Infection
doi: 10.1086/498532
pmid: 16323127
Behavioral Risk Exposure and Host Genetics of Susceptibility to HIV‐1 Infection
Some individuals are readily infected with low human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) exposure, whereas others appear less susceptible, suggesting that host genetics plays a role in the viral entry pathway. The matched case-control study design with measured risk exposures provides an avenue for discovering genes involved in susceptibility to infection.We conducted a nested case-control study of African Americans (266 HIV-1 seroconverter cases and 532 seronegative controls from the AIDS Link to Intravenous Experience cohort), to examine the association between 50 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in 9 candidate genes (CCR5, CCR2, RANTES, MIP1A, MCP2, IL10, IFNG, MCSF, and IL2) and susceptibility to HIV-1 infection. To account for differential exposure propensities, risk behavior self-reported during semiannual visits was used to estimate a standardized cumulative risk exposure (SCRE). Individual SNPs were evaluated using conditional logistic-regression models, and the inferred haplotypes were assessed in the haplotype trend regression analyses after adjusting for age and SCRE.Four SNPs (CCR2-V64I, CCR5-2459, MIP1A+954, and IL2+3896) and specific haplotypes in the IL2 and CCR2/CCR5 regions were significantly associated with HIV-1 infection susceptibility in different genetic models.Our results suggest that genetic variants in associated host genes may play an important role in susceptibility to HIV-1 infection.
- University of California, San Diego United States
- National Institute of Health Pakistan
- National Institutes of Health United States
- National Cancer Institute United States
- Johns Hopkins University United States
Adult, Male, Receptors, CCR5, Receptors, CCR2, Black People, HIV Infections, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Risk Assessment, Risk-Taking, Medicine and Health Sciences, Humans, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Chemokine CCL4, Immunology and Infectious Disease, Genetics and Genomics, Macrophage Inflammatory Proteins, Haplotypes, Case-Control Studies, HIV-1, Interleukin-2, Regression Analysis, Female, Receptors, Chemokine
Adult, Male, Receptors, CCR5, Receptors, CCR2, Black People, HIV Infections, Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide, Risk Assessment, Risk-Taking, Medicine and Health Sciences, Humans, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Chemokine CCL4, Immunology and Infectious Disease, Genetics and Genomics, Macrophage Inflammatory Proteins, Haplotypes, Case-Control Studies, HIV-1, Interleukin-2, Regression Analysis, Female, Receptors, Chemokine
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