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Homozygosity and risk of childhood death due to invasive bacterial disease.

Authors :
Lyons EJ
Amos W
Berkley JA
Mwangi I
Shafi M
Williams TN
Newton CR
Peshu N
Marsh K
Scott JA
Hill AV
Source :
BMC medical genetics [BMC Med Genet] 2009 Jun 12; Vol. 10, pp. 55. Date of Electronic Publication: 2009 Jun 12.
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

Background: Genetic heterozygosity is increasingly being shown to be a key predictor of fitness in natural populations, both through inbreeding depression, inbred individuals having low heterozygosity, and also through chance linkage between a marker and a gene under balancing selection. One important component of fitness that is often highlighted is resistance to parasites and other pathogens. However, the significance of equivalent loci in human populations remains unclear. Consequently, we performed a case-control study of fatal invasive bacterial disease in Kenyan children using a genome-wide screen with microsatellite markers.<br />Methods: 148 cases, comprising children aged <13 years who died of invasive bacterial disease, (variously, bacteraemia, bacterial meningitis or neonatal sepsis) and 137 age-matched, healthy children were sampled in a prospective study conducted at Kilifi District Hospital, Kenya. Samples were genotyped for 134 microsatellite markers using the ABI LD20 marker set and analysed for an association between homozygosity and mortality.<br />Results: At five markers homozygosity was strongly associated with mortality (odds ratio range 4.7 - 12.2) with evidence of interactions between some markers. Mortality was associated with different non-overlapping marker groups in Gram positive and Gram negative bacterial disease. Homozygosity at susceptibility markers was common (prevalence 19-49%) and, with the large effect sizes, this suggests that bacterial disease mortality may be strongly genetically determined.<br />Conclusion: Balanced polymorphisms appear to be more widespread in humans than previously appreciated and play a critical role in modulating susceptibility to infectious disease. The effect sizes we report, coupled with the stochasticity of exposure to pathogens suggests that infection and mortality are far from random due to a strong genetic basis.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1471-2350
Volume :
10
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
BMC medical genetics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
19523202
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2350-10-55