| Literature DB >> 17651505 |
Juan Lama1, Vicente Planelles.
Abstract
Transmission of HIV first results in an acute infection, followed by an apparently asymptomatic period that averages ten years. In the absence of antiretroviral treatment, most patients progress into a generalized immune dysfunction that culminates in death. The length of the asymptomatic period varies, and in rare cases infected individuals never progress to AIDS. Other individuals whose behavioral traits put them at high-risk of HIV transmission, surprisingly appear resistant and never succumb to infection. These unique cases highlight the fact that susceptibility to HIV infection and progression to disease are complex traits modulated by environmental and genetic factors. Recent evidence has indicated that natural variations in host genes can influence the outcome of HIV infection and its transmission. In this review we summarize the available literature on the roles of cellular factors and their genetic variation in modulating HIV infection and disease progression.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2007 PMID: 17651505 PMCID: PMC1978541 DOI: 10.1186/1742-4690-4-52
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Retrovirology ISSN: 1742-4690 Impact factor: 4.602
Chemokine and chemokine receptor variants modulating HIV transmission and pathogenesis
| CCR5 | Δ32 | Recessive | Resistance to infection | Truncated co-receptor is not expressed at the cell surface. | Caucasians (4–15%) | 25, 30, 31 |
| CCR5 | Δ32 | Dominant | Delay AIDS | Reduced co-receptor expression. | Caucasians (4–15%) | 38–41 |
| CCR5 | C20S | Dominant | Prevent HIV infection in the presence of Δ32 | Very low co-receptor expression. Loss of disulfide bridge, improper folding? | Caucasians (0.3%) | 49, 51 |
| CCR5 | A29S | Unknown (2) | Not evaluated | Failure to bind RANTES, MIP-1β and MIP-1α | Africans (1.5%) | 49,51 |
| CCR5 | R60S | Unknown (2) | Not evaluated | Poor co-receptor internalization | Africans (1.3%) | 51 |
| CCR5 | C101X | Dominant | Prevent HIV infection in the presence of Δ32 | Truncated co-receptor not expressed at cell surface | Africans (1.4%) | 49, 51, 52 |
| CCR5 | G106R | Unknown(2) | HIV resistance/Delay AIDS? | Very low co-receptor expression | Asians (1.4%) | 50 |
| CCR5 | C178R | Unknown(2) | HIV resistance/Delay AIDS? | Very low co-receptor expression | Asians (0.5%) | 49 |
| CCR5 | C269F | Unknown(2) | HIV resistance/Delay AIDS? | Very low co-receptor expression. Loss of disulfide bridge, improper folding? | Asians (1.4%) | 49, 50 |
| CCR5 | FS299 | Unknown(2) | No effect on HIV transmission | Truncated co-receptor, poorly expressed | Asians (4%) | 49 |
| CCR5 | P1 (promoter haplotype) | Recessive | Accelerate AIDS | Increase CCR5 expression? | Unknown | 53 |
| CCR5 | 59029-A/A (promoter) | Recessive | Accelerate AIDS | Increase CCR5 expression | Caucasians (57%) | 54 |
| CCR2 | 64I | Dominant | Delay AIDS in some cohorts | Influence CCR5 or CXCR4 expression? | General (10–20%) | 62, 64, 66, 67 |
| CX3CR1 | I249/M280 | Recessive | Accelerate AIDS? | Influence recruitment of immune cells? | Caucasians (I249: 26%; M280: 14%) | 69, 71 |
| MIP-1αP (CCL3L1) | Gene copy number | Increase susceptibility to infection | Copy number correlates with levels of CCR5 agonist. Block HIV entry | Africans (5–7 mean copy number) | 96 | |
| MIP-1β(CCL4L1) | L2 | Dominant | Increase susceptibility to infection | Reduced level of MIP-1β | Caucasians (16%) | 97 |
| RANTES (CCL5) | -403A (promoter) | Dominant | Delay AIDS | Up-regulate RANTES transcription | Asians (27%) | 100–102 |
| RANTES (CCL5) | -28G (promoter) | Dominant | Delay AIDS | Up-regulate RANTES transcription | Asians (8%), rare in Caucasians | 100–102 |
| RANTES (CCL5) | In1.1C (intronic) | Dominant | Accelerate AIDS | Down-regulate RANTES transcription | General (14–17%) | 106 |
| SDF-1 (CXCL12) | 3'A | Recessive | Delay AIDS? | Unknown. | Asians (25–35%) Oceanian (50–70%) | 112, 113 |
| MCP1/MCP3/Eotaxin | H7 haplotype | Dominant | Decrease susceptibility to infection | Unknown immunomodulatory effects | Caucasians (19%) | 118 |
(1) Allele frequency in populations in which the variant is more predominant. (2) No homozygous individuals have been identified
Anti-HIV activity of human defensins
| HNP1, HNP2, and HNP3 | Constitutive HPN2 may be the product of proteolytic processing of HNP1/HPN3 | Neutrophils and promyelocytes | • CD4 down-modulation | 131, 143, 146 |
| HNP4 | Constitutive | Neutrophils | • Unknown (lectin-independent mechanism) | 135 |
| HBD2 and HBD3 | Inducible by HIV, opportunistic infections, and pro-inflammatory cytokines (TNF, IL-1B) | Epithelial cells, monocytes, monocytes-derived DCs, macrophages, and keratinocytes | • Viral membrane disruption (absence of serum) | 148–151 |
| Retrocyclins (RTD1, RTD2) | Synthesis blocked in humans by premature termination codon | RNA transcripts, not protein, expressed in bone marrow | • Prevent HIV entry by binding to CD4 and gp120 | 138–140 |
Human genes modulating HIV pathogenesis by influencing post-entry steps of the viral life cycle
| CypA (PP1A) | 1650 G | Recessive | Delay AIDS | Unknown | Unknown | 12 |
| TRIM5α | Haplotype 9 | Increase HIV transmission | Unknown | Caucasians (1%) | 182 | |
| TRIM5α | 136Q | Dominant | Protect against HIV infection | 136Q variant displays stronger anti-HIV activity | African Americans (20%) | 183 |
| TRIM5α | 43Y | Dominant | Protect against HIV infection | Unknown | African Americans (6.5%) | 183 |
| APOBEC3G | 186R | Recessive | Accelerate AIDS | Unknown | African Americans (36.7%) | 206 |
| APOBEC3G | C40693T | Unknown | Increase HIV transmission | Unknown (variant found in intronic region) | Caucasians (< 1%) | 208 |
| Cullin5 | SNP6 A/G | Dominant (additive) | Accelerated CD4 T cell depletion and AIDS progression | Unknown (the SNP6 G product displays stronger binding to nuclear proteins | Africans (5%)(2) | 210 |
| TSG101 | -183C | Dominant | Accelerated CD4 T cell decline | Increase virus budding? (paradoxically the -183C variant reduces replication in ex-vivo systems) | Caucasians (17%) | 12, 229 |
(1) Allele frequency in populations in which the variant is more predominant. (2) Higher allele frequencies are observed in European Americans (10%) and Chinese (20%), however the correlation is not observed in these populations.