| Literature DB >> 24405814 |
Danielle Carpenter1, Carmen Taype, Jon Goulding, Mike Levin, Brian Eley, Suzanne Anderson, Marie-Anne Shaw, John A L Armour.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Tuberculosis is a major infectious disease and functional studies have provided evidence that both the chemokine MIP-1α and its receptor CCR5 play a role in susceptibility to TB. Thus by measuring copy number variation of CCL3L1, one of the genes that encode MIP-1α, and genotyping a functional promoter polymorphism -2459A > G in CCR5 (rs1799987) we investigate the influence of MIP-1α and CCR5, independently and combined, in susceptibility to clinically active TB in three populations, a Peruvian population (n = 1132), a !Xhosa population (n = 605) and a South African Coloured population (n = 221). The three populations include patients with clinically diagnosed pulmonary TB, as well as other, less prevalent forms of extrapulmonary TB. METHODS ANDEntities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24405814 PMCID: PMC3897992 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2350-15-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Genet ISSN: 1471-2350 Impact factor: 2.103
Number of genotyped cases and control for each population
| Peruvian | 621 | 0 | 511 | 0 | 1132 |
| !Xhosa | 0 | 141 | 341 | 123 | 605 |
| Coloured | 0 | 56 | 152 | 13 | 221 |
Figure 1Copy number distribution within the different populations. The distribution of copy number values in the different populations with the Peruvian population in black, !Xhosa population in white and Coloured population in grey.
Figure 2Copy number distributions between cases and controls within the different populations. Histogram of the (a) Peruvian TB cases (n = 610) and control samples (n = 513), (b) !Xhosa paediatric cases (n = 141) and adult control samples (n = 341) and (c) Coloured paediatric cases (n = 53) and adult control samples (n = 152). Cases are shown in black and controls in white. There are no significant differences in mean copy number between the cases and controls for any dataset.
Figure 3Distribution of genotypes in the different populations. The distribution of CCR5 genotypes in the different populations, with the Peruvian population in black, !Xhosa population in white and Coloured population in grey.
The distributions of genotypes in cases and controls for the Peruvian samples
| AA | 218 (44%) | 275 (46%) | 218 (45%) | 36 (47%) | 16 (55%) | 5 (56%) |
| AG | 220 (44%) | 265 (44%) | 218 (45%) | 33 (43%) | 11 (38%) | 3 (33%) |
| GG | 62 (12%) | 61 (10%) | 50 (10%) | 8 (10%) | 2 (7%) | 1 (11%) |
The distributions of genotypes in cases and controls for the !Xhosa samples
| AA | 15 (10%) | 22 (18%) | 52 (14%) | 74 (15%) |
| AG | 79 (53%) | 47 (40%) | 169 (47%) | 216 (45%) |
| GG | 56 (37%) | 50 (42%) | 144 (39%) | 194 (40%) |
The distributions of genotypes in cases and controls for the coloured samples
| AA | 17 (29%) | 1 (10%) | 45 (30%) | 46 (28%) |
| AG | 23 (40%) | 5 (45%) | 59 (40%) | 64 (40%) |
| GG | 18 (31%) | 5 (45%) | 46 (30%) | 51 (32%) |