| Literature DB >> 22920050 |
Daniëlle van Manen1, Angélique B van 't Wout, Hanneke Schuitemaker.
Abstract
Susceptibility to HIV-1 and the clinical course after infection show a substantial heterogeneity between individuals. Part of this variability can be attributed to host genetic variation. Initial candidate gene studies have revealed interesting host factors that influence HIV infection, replication and pathogenesis. Recently, genome-wide association studies (GWAS) were utilized for unbiased searches at a genome-wide level to discover novel genetic factors and pathways involved in HIV-1 infection. This review gives an overview of findings from the GWAS performed on HIV infection, within different cohorts, with variable patient and phenotype selection. Furthermore, novel techniques and strategies in research that might contribute to the complete understanding of virus-host interactions and its role on the pathogenesis of HIV infection are discussed.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22920050 PMCID: PMC3468375 DOI: 10.1186/1742-4690-9-70
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Retrovirology ISSN: 1742-4690 Impact factor: 4.602
Description of GWAS on HIV infection and the most interesting signals discovered
| CHAVI | 2007 | RNA VL setpoint | HCP5 (rs2395029) | 9.4E-12 | Significant, confirmed | Caucasian | [ |
| | | | −35 HLA-C (rs9264942) | 3.8E-09 | Significant, confirmed | | |
| | | CD4 T cell decline | ZNRD1 (rs9261174) | 3.9E-07 | Confirmed | | |
| ANRS PRIMO | 2008 | plasma HIV RNA primary infection | HCP5 (rs2395029) | 9.3E-07 | Significant, confirmed | Caucasian | [ |
| | | cellular HIV DNA primary infection | HCP5 (rs2395029) | 6.7E-07 | Significant, confirmed | | |
| GRIV | 2009 | long-term nonprogression | HCP5 (rs2395029) | 6.8E-10 | Significant, confirmed | Caucasian | [ |
| | | | C6orf48 (rs9368699) | 5.3E-07 | Putative | | |
| Euro-CHAVI, MACS | 2009 | RNA VL setpoint | HCP5 (rs2395029) | 4.5E-35 | Significant, confirmed | Caucasian | [ |
| | | | −35 HLA-C (rs9264942) | 5.9E-32 | Significant, confirmed | | |
| GRIV | 2009 | rapid progression | PRMT6 (rs4118325) | 6.1E-07 | Putative | Caucasian | [ |
| | | | SOX5 (rs1522232) | 1.8E-06 | Putative | | |
| International HIV controllers study | 2010 | VL controllers | >300 SNPs in MHC | <5.0E-08 | Significant | Caucasian, African, Hispanic | [ |
| | | −35 HLA-C (rs9264942) | 2.8E-35 | Significant, confirmed | | ||
| | | HCP5 (rs2395029) | 9.7E-26 | Significant, confirmed | | ||
| | | MICA (rs4418214) | 1.4E-34 | Significant | | ||
| | | PSORSIC3 (rs3131018) | 4.2E-16 | Significant | | ||
| Queen Elizabeth Central Hospital, Malawi | 2010 | mother-to-child transmission | HS3ST3A1 (rs8069770) | 3.8E-05 | Putative | African | [ |
| MACS | 2010 | progression to AIDS | PROX1 (rs17762192) | 6.2E-07 | Confirmed | Caucasian | [ |
| DoD HIV NHS and MACS | 2010 | RNA VL setpoint | HLA-B*5703 | 5.6E-10 | Significant, confirmed | African | [ |
| GRIV, MACS, ACS | 2010 | long-term nonprogression (VL > 100 cp/ml) | CXCR6 (rs2234358) | 9.7E-10 | Significant, confirmed | Caucasian | [ |
| CHAVI, Malawi | 2011 | HIV acquisition | | | | African | [ |
| MACS | 2011 | progression to AIDS 1987 | PARD3B (rs11884476) | 3.4E-09 | Significant, confirmed | Caucasian, African | [ |
| blood donors, Sanquin Amsterdam | 2011 | DYRK1A (rs12483205) | 2.2E-05 | Putative | Caucasian | [ | |
| ACS | 2011 | progression to AIDS, or AIDS-related death | AGR3 (rs152363) | 3.5E-06 | Putative | Caucasian | [ |
| Thailand | 2011 | Nevaripine tolerance | CCHCR1 (rs1265112) | 1.2E-08 | Significant | Asian | [ |
| African serodiscordant couples cohort | 2011 | HIV acquisition | African | [ |
VL; viral load.