| Literature DB >> 19552960 |
Joaquín Zúñiga1, Viviana Romero, José Azocar, Daniel Terreros, María Inés Vargas-Rojas, Diana Torres-García, Luis Jiménez-Alvarez, Gilberto Vargas-Alarcón, Julio Granados-Montiel, Zaheed Husain, Raymond T Chung, Chester A Alper, Edmond J Yunis.
Abstract
Intravenous drug use has become the principal route of hepatitis C virus (HCV) transmission due to the sharing of infected needles. In this study, we analyzed the distribution of HLA-KIR genotypes among 160 Puerto Rican intravenous drug users (IDUs) with HCV infection and 92 HCV-negative Puerto Rican IDUs. We found a significant association between the presence of different combinations of KIR inhibitory receptor genes (KIR2DL2 and/or KIR2DL3, pC=0.01, OR=0.07; KIR2DL2 and/or KIR2DL3+KIR2DS4, pC=0.01, OR=0.39) and HLA-C1 homozygous genotypes (HLA-C1+KIR2DS4, pC=0.02, OR=0.43; HLA-C1+KIR2DL2+KIR2DS4, pC=0.02, OR=0.40) together with the activating receptor KIR2DS4 (HLA-C1+KIR2DS4+KIR2DL3 and/or KIR2DL2, pC=0.004, OR=0.38) with protection from HCV infection. Our findings in HCV-infected and non-infected IDUs suggest an important role for KIRs (KIR2DL2 and KIR2DL3) with group HLA-C1 molecules, in the presence of activating KIR2DS4, in protection from HCV infection. These results support the hypothesis that activator signaling, mediated by KIR2DS4, plays a determinant role in the regulation of NK cell antiviral-activity.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19552960 PMCID: PMC2813779 DOI: 10.1016/j.molimm.2009.05.014
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Immunol ISSN: 0161-5890 Impact factor: 4.407