| Literature DB >> 31611910 |
Prisca K Thami1,2, Emile R Chimusa1.
Abstract
The interesting history of Southern Africa has put the region in the spotlight for population medical genetics. Major events including the Bantu expansion and European colonialism have imprinted unique genetic signatures within autochthonous populations of Southern Africa, this resulting in differential allele frequencies across the region. This genetic structure has potential implications on susceptibility and resistance to infectious diseases such as human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. Southern Africa is the region affected worst by HIV. Here, we discuss advances made in genome-wide association studies (GWAS) of HIV-1 in the past 12 years and dissect population diversity within Southern Africa. Our findings accentuate that a plethora of factors such as migration, language and culture, admixture, and natural selection have profiled the genetics of the people of Southern Africa. Genetic structure has been observed among the Khoe-San, among Bantu speakers, and between the Khoe-San, Coloureds, and Bantu speakers. Moreover, Southern African populations have complex admixture scenarios. Few GWAS of HIV-1 have been conducted in Southern Africa, with only one of these identifying two novel variants (HCG22rs2535307 and CCNG1kgp22385164) significantly associated with HIV-1 acquisition and progression. High genetic diversity, multi-wave genetic mixture and low linkage disequilibrium of Southern African populations constitute a challenge in identifying genetic variants with modest risk or protective effect against HIV-1. We therefore posit that it is compelling to assess genome-wide contribution of ancestry to HIV-1 infection. We further suggest robust methods that can pin-point population-specific variants that may contribute to the control of HIV-1 in Southern Africa.Entities:
Keywords: HIV-1; Southern Africa; diversity; genome-wide association studies (GWAS); host genetics; population structure
Year: 2019 PMID: 31611910 PMCID: PMC6777512 DOI: 10.3389/fgene.2019.00905
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Genet ISSN: 1664-8021 Impact factor: 4.599
Figure 1Factors contributing to human genetic diversity within Southern Africa. Although it is complex to represent the interplay between geographic isolation, migration, population bottleneck, admixture, language, culture, and natural selection on the genetic structure of Southern Africa, this figure provides a basic illustration of some of the factors that shaped the genetics of the people of Southern Africa. Geographic distribution and migration into Southern Africa have influenced population admixture and geographic isolation, yielding to population bottleneck, mutation, and selection, that shaped the genetics, culture, and language diversity in Southern Africa.
Figure 2Migration routes into Southern Africa. We present here the main routes of pre-historic migration of the ancestors of the Southern African inhabitants. The circles represent places of origin, the gray circle being the proto-Bantu land and dark red circles being other places of origin. The arrows represent movement of people from places of origin into Southern Africa.
Genome-wide population diversity studies of Southern African populations.
| Population | Country | Genotyping method | Marker | Major findings | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Khoe-San and Bantu speakers | Namibia, South Africa | Microarray (genome-wide) | Autosomal SNPs and CNVs | Khoe-San and Bantu speakers are genetically different. | ( |
| Bantu speakers, SAC and Khoe-San | South Africa | Panel sequencing | Autosomal SNPs, indels, and microsatellites | Khoe-San, SAC and Bantu speakers are genetically divergent. SAC show the highest level of intercontinental admixture. | ( |
| Khoe-San and Bantu speakers | Botswana, Namibia, South Africa | Microarray (genome-wide) | Autosomal SNPs | Structure observed among the Khoisan, and between the Khoisan, SAC, and Bantu speakers. | ( |
| Khoe-San | South Africa | Microarray (genome-wide) | Autosomal SNPs | Precolonial Eurasian admixture observed in Khoe-San populations. | ( |
| Khoe-San | Angola, Botswana, South Africa | Microarray (genome-wide) | Autosomal SNPs, mtDNA, and Y-chromosome | Khoe-San show high genetic differentiation and have sex-biased Bantu speakers and European admixture. | ( |
| Bantu speakers and SAC | South Africa | Microarray (genome-wide) and WGS | Autosomal SNPs | Multiway admixture including Khoe-San ancestry observed in the SAC population. Differential Khoe-San admixture detected in Bantu speakers. | ( |
| Bantu speakers | South Africa | Microarray (genome-wide) | Autosomal SNPs | Weak clustering of southeastern Bantu speakers possibly due to admixture with Khoe-San. | ( |
| Khoe-San and Bantu speakers | South Africa, Namibia, Malawi | Microarray (genome-wide) | Autosomal SNPs | Admixture in Malawian population supports the late split of the Eastern Bantu speakers. Eurasian admixture detected in South African Khoe-San, dating back to European colonial period settlement in Southern Africa. | ( |
| Bantu speakers and Khoe-San | Botswana | Microarray (whole exome) and WES | Autosomal SNPs | Within population structure of Botswana was not observed. Genetic differentiation was observed between Sotho, Zulu (of South Africa), and the Botswana population. | ( |
Indels, insertions/deletions; SAC, The “Coloured” of South Africa; SNP, single nucleotide polymorphism; CNV, copy number variation; mtDNA, mitochondrial DNA; WES, whole exome sequencing; WGS, whole genome sequencing. Details on specific groups within Khoe-San and Bantu speakers can be obtained from original publications.
Figure 3The global prevalence of HIV as of 2017. Of all the countries that had data, Southern Africa had the highest HIV prevalence. Source: Our World in Data; data provided by UNAIDS.
GWAS significant genes associated with HIV-1 acquisition, viral load set point, and progression.
| Known gene | Description | Potential protein function | Effect | Population | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| HLA complex P5 | Related in sequence to human endogenous retroviruses and possibly interacts directly with HIV. | Minor alleles of SNPs rs2395029*, rs2255221, and rs2523608** were associated with low viral loads and delayed progression | Europeans, African Americans, and Africans | ( | |
| MHC class I B | Plays a critical role in the immune system; peptide presentation | SNPs found in the gene were associated with low viral loads and delayed progression. | Europeans, Chinese, African Americans, and Africans | ( | |
| MHC class I C | Plays a critical role in the immune system; peptide presentation | Minor allele of rs9264942 was associated with low viral loads and delayed progression. | Europeans | ( | |
| Zinc ribbon domain containing 1 | Plays a role in regulation of cell proliferation. | SNPs identified in this gene were associated with low viral loads and delayed progression. | Europeans | ( | |
| Tenascin XB | Plays a role in matrix maturation during wound healing. | SNPs identified in this gene were associated with low viral loads. | Europeans | ( | |
| Tumor necrosis factor | Cytokine. Involved in the regulation of biological processes including cell proliferation, differentiation, apoptosis, lipid metabolism, and coagulation. | Minor allele of SNP rs3093662 was associated with low viral loads. | Europeans | ( | |
| Syndecan 2 | Mediates cell binding, cell signaling, and cytoskeletal organization. Syndecan receptors are required for internalization of the HIV-1 tat protein. | Minor allele of SNP rs2575735 was associated with reduction in HIV reservoir. | Europeans | ( | |
| DEAH-Box Helicase 40 Yippee Like 2 | NR | Minor allele of intergenic rs6503919 was associated with low viral reservoir. | Europeans | ( | |
| Tripartite motif containing 10 | Plays a role in terminal differentiation of erythroid cells. | SNP rs9468692 was associated with low viral loads. | Europeans | ( | |
| Notch receptor 4 | Regulates interactions between physically adjacent cells. | Minor allele of SNP rs8192591 was associated with low viral loads and delayed progression. | Europeans | ( | |
| Ring finger protein 39 | Plays a role in early phase of synaptic plasticity. | SNPs found in the gene were associated with low viral loads and delayed progression. | Europeans | ( | |
| Small nucleolar RNA host gene 32 | NR | Minor allele of SNP rs9368699 was associated with low viral loads and delayed progression. | Europeans | ( | |
| Psoriasis susceptibility 1 candidate 1 | Confers susceptibility to psoriasis and systemic sclerosis. | SNPs found in the gene were associated with low viral loads. | Europeans | ( | |
| MHC class I polypeptide-related sequence B | Involved in immune response. Activates natural killer cells, CD8 alphabeta T cells, and gammadelta T cells. | SNPs found in the gene were associated with low viral loads. | Europeans | ( | |
| Sex determining region Y -box 5 | Regulation of embryonic development and determination of the cell fate. | Minor allele of SNP rs1522232 was associated with delayed progression. | Europeans | ( | |
| Retinoid X receptor gamma | Mediates the antiproliferative effects of retinoic acid. | Minor allele of SNP rs10800098 was associated with rapid progression. | Europeans | ( | |
| Transforming growth factor beta receptor associated protein 1 | Acts as a chaperone in signaling downstream of TGF-beta. | Minor allele of SNP rs1020064 was associated with delayed progression. | Europeans | ( | |
| Prospero homeobox 1 | Plays a role in development. | A haplotype of rs17762192, rs17762150, and rs1367951 was associated with delayed progression. | Europeans | ( | |
| MHC class I polypeptide-related sequence A | A ligand for the NKG2-D type II receptor that acts as a stress-induced antigen that is broadly recognized by intestinal epithelial gamma delta T cells. | Minor allele of SNP rs4418214 was associated with low viral loads. | Europeans | ( | |
| Psoriasis susceptibility 1 candidate 3 | NR | Minor allele of SNP rs3131018 was associated with low viral loads. | Europeans | ( | |
| Pseudogenes | NR | Minor allele of intergenic SNP rs2523590 was associated with low viral loads. | Europeans, African Americans, Hispanics | ( | |
| HLA complex group 22 | NR | Minor allele of SNP rs9262632 was associated with low viral loads in African Americans. Minor allele of SNP rs2535307 was associated with rapid progression and increased susceptibility. | African Americans and Southern Africans | ( | |
| Rho GTPase activating protein 44 | Involved in GTPase activation activity and phospholipid binding. | Major allele of SNP rs2072255 was associated with rapid progression. | Europeans | ( | |
| Par-3 family cell polarity regulator beta | May play a role in asymmetrical cell division and cell polarization processes. | SNP rs11884476 was associated with delayed progression. | Europeans | ( | |
| C-C motif chemokine receptor 5 | Acts as a co-receptor for macrophage-tropic viruses to enter host cells. | CCR5-Δ32 was associated with resistance to HIV-1 infection. | Europeans | ( | |
| Cyclin G1 | May play a role in cell proliferation and regulation | SNP kgp22385164 was associated with rapid progression. | Southern Africans | ( |
Potential function of genes according to Pubmed and GeneCards. MHC, major histocompatibility complex; SNP, single nucleotide polymorphism; *, SNP tags HLA-B57*01 in Europeans; **, SNP tags HLA-B57*03 in Africans; NR, no records.
Figure 4Pathway interaction network of genome-wide significant genes that control HIV-1 phenotypes. SNPs within or close to these genes are associated with the control of HIV-1. Striped circles indicate genes which have been identified from GWAS of HIV-1. Circles without stripes indicate genes putatively involved in the same pathway with genes implicated in HIV-1 phenotypes via GWAS. Purple lines represent gene co-expressions. The following genes could not be recognized by GeneMANIA software: HCP5, PSORS1C3, AL671883.2, DHFRP2, and HCG22.