| Literature DB >> 31488196 |
Sara Clohisey1, John Kenneth Baillie2,3.
Abstract
Most people exposed to a new flu virus do not notice any symptoms. A small minority develops critical illness. Some of this extremely broad variation in susceptibility is explained by the size of the initial inoculum or the influenza exposure history of the individual; some is explained by generic host factors, such as frailty, that decrease resilience following any systemic insult. Some demographic factors (pregnancy, obesity, and advanced age) appear to confer a more specific susceptibility to severe illness following infection with influenza viruses. As with other infectious diseases, a substantial component of susceptibility is determined by host genetics. Several genetic susceptibility variants have now been reported with varying levels of evidence. Susceptible hosts may have impaired intracellular controls of viral replication (e.g. IFITM3, TMPRS22 variants), defective interferon responses (e.g. GLDC, IRF7/9 variants), or defects in cell-mediated immunity with increased baseline levels of systemic inflammation (obesity, pregnancy, advanced age). These mechanisms may explain the prolonged viral replication reported in critically ill patients with influenza: patients with life-threatening disease are, by definition, abnormal hosts. Understanding these molecular mechanisms of susceptibility may in the future enable the design of host-directed therapies to promote resilience.Entities:
Keywords: ARDS; Genetics; Influenza; Susceptibility
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31488196 PMCID: PMC6729070 DOI: 10.1186/s13054-019-2566-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Crit Care ISSN: 1364-8535 Impact factor: 9.097
Fig. 1Conceptual visualisation of variation in specificity of host susceptibility factors. Factors predicted to confer more specific susceptibility to influenza are placed higher in the diagram
Genes and associated single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) related to influenza A susceptibility in humans
| Gene | Gene name | Function | SNP | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Entry factors/cell membrane | ||||
| IFITM3 | Interferon-induced transmembrane protein 3 | Antiviral | rs12252-C | [ |
| rs34481144-A | [ | |||
| CD55 | Complement decay-accelerating factor precursor 55 | Inhibition of complement activation | rs2564978 T/T | [ |
| TMPRSS2 | Transmembrane protease, serine 2 | Serine protease | rs2070788 GG | [ |
| GLDC | Glycine decarboxylase | Component of the glycine cleavage system | rs1755609-G | [ |
| LGALS1 | Galectin-1 | Cell-cell interactions | rs4820294 | [ |
| rs2899292 | [ | |||
| rs4820294 | [ | |||
| ST3GAL1 (*) | ST3 beta-galactoside alpha-2,3-sialyltransferase 1 | Transfer of sialic acids to galactose-containing substrates | rs113350588 | [ |
| rs1048479 | [ | |||
| TNFA (*) | Tumour necrosis factor alpha | Inflammation and immune signalling | rs361525-A | [ |
| TLR3 (*) | Toll-like Receptor 3 | Pathogen recognition | rs5743313-CT | [ |
| rs5743313-CC | [ | |||
| Surfactant proteins | ||||
| SP-A2 (*) | Pulmonary-surfactant associated protein A2 | Pathogen binding and immune signalling | rs1965708-C | [ |
| rs1059046-A | [ | |||
| SP-B | Pulmonary-surfactant associated protein B | Pathogen binding and immune signalling | rs1130866 | [ |
| Interleukins | ||||
| IL1A (*) | Interleukin 1 alpha | Inflammation and immune signalling | rs17561-T | [ |
| IL1B (*) | Interleukin 1 beta | Inflammation and immune signalling | rs1143627-C | [ |
| rs16944-AG | [ | |||
| rs3136558-TC | [ | |||
| IL28B | Interleukin 28 b, IFN-λ 3 | Immunomodulation | rs8099917-TT | [ |
| IL17 (*) | Interleukin 17 | Inflammation and immune signalling | rs2275913 (GG and AG) | [ |
| IL6 (*) | Interleukin 6 | Inflammation and immune signalling | rs1818879-(GA and GG) | [ |
Gene: gene symbol. Gene name: gene name and alternate name. Function: summary function of gene product. SNP: SNPs associated with host susceptibility to influenza A associated with gene. (*) represents genes not addressed in the text