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Association Study of Common Genetic Variants and HIV-1 Acquisition in 6,300 Infected Cases and 7,200 Controls

Authors :
David W. Haas
Hanneke Schuitemaker
Steven M. Wolinsky
Paul I.W. de Bakker
Jean-François Zagury
Cédric Coulonges
Olivier Lambotte
Simon Mallal
Sekar Kathiresan
Patrick R. Shea
Pierre Rucart
Jacques Fellay
Niels Obel
Gregory D. Kirk
Joshua T. Herbeck
Fredrik O. Vannberg
David Goldstein
Francis A. Plummer
Ma Luo
Stephan Ripke
M. S. Sandhu
Amalio Telenti
Daniëlle van Manen
Susan Buchbinder
Stephen J. O'Brien
Judith Dalmau
Ying Qi
Mary Carrington
James I. Mullins
Olivier Delaneau
Steven G. Deeks
Florencia Pereyra
Bruce D. Walker
Laurence Meyer
Cheryl A. Winkler
Paul J. McLaren
Ioannis Theodorou
Andrea De Luca
James J. Goedert
Leonard H. van den Berg
Jan H. Veldink
Guido Poli
Javier Martinez-Picado
Andrea Cossarizza
José M. Miró
Amy C. Weintrob
Mclaren, Pj
Coulonges, C
Ripke, S
van den Berg, L
Buchbinder, S
Carrington, M
Cossarizza, A
Dalmau, J
Deeks, Sg
Delaneau, O
De Luca, A
Goedert, Jj
Haas, D
Herbeck, Jt
Kathiresan, S
Kirk, Gd
Lambotte, O
Luo, M
Mallal, S
van Manen, D
Martinez Picado, J
Meyer, L
Miro, Jm
Mullins, Ji
Obel, N
O'Brien, Sj
Pereyra, F
Plummer, Fa
Poli, Guido
Qi, Y
Rucart, P
Sandhu, M
Shea, Pr
Schuitemaker, H
Theodorou, I
Vannberg, F
Veldink, J
Walker, Bd
Weintrob, A
Winkler, Ca
Wolinsky, S
Telenti, A
Goldstein, Db
de Bakker, Piw
Zagury, Jf
Fellay, J.
Universitat de Barcelona
Other departments
AII - Amsterdam institute for Infection and Immunity
Experimental Immunology
Source :
PLoS pathogens, PLoS Pathogens, Vol 9, Iss 7, p e1003515 (2013), Recercat. Dipósit de la Recerca de Catalunya, instname, PLoS Pathogens, PLoS pathogens, 9(7). Public Library of Science, Plos Pathogens, vol. 9, no. 7, pp. e1003515, Dipòsit Digital de la UB, Universidad de Barcelona
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
Public Library of Science (PLoS), 2013.

Abstract

Multiple genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have been performed in HIV-1 infected individuals, identifying common genetic influences on viral control and disease course. Similarly, common genetic correlates of acquisition of HIV-1 after exposure have been interrogated using GWAS, although in generally small samples. Under the auspices of the International Collaboration for the Genomics of HIV, we have combined the genome-wide single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) data collected by 25 cohorts, studies, or institutions on HIV-1 infected individuals and compared them to carefully matched population-level data sets (a list of all collaborators appears in Note S1 in Text S1). After imputation using the 1,000 Genomes Project reference panel, we tested approximately 8 million common DNA variants (SNPs and indels) for association with HIV-1 acquisition in 6,334 infected patients and 7,247 population samples of European ancestry. Initial association testing identified the SNP rs4418214, the C allele of which is known to tag the HLA-B*57:01 and B*27:05 alleles, as genome-wide significant (p = 3.6×10−11). However, restricting analysis to individuals with a known date of seroconversion suggested that this association was due to the frailty bias in studies of lethal diseases. Further analyses including testing recessive genetic models, testing for bulk effects of non-genome-wide significant variants, stratifying by sexual or parenteral transmission risk and testing previously reported associations showed no evidence for genetic influence on HIV-1 acquisition (with the exception of CCR5Δ32 homozygosity). Thus, these data suggest that genetic influences on HIV acquisition are either rare or have smaller effects than can be detected by this sample size.<br />Author Summary Comparing the frequency differences between common DNA variants in disease-affected cases and in unaffected controls has been successful in uncovering the genetic component of multiple diseases. This approach is most effective when large samples of cases and controls are available. Here we combine information from multiple studies of HIV infected patients, including more than 6,300 HIV+ individuals, with data from 7,200 general population samples of European ancestry to test nearly 8 million common DNA variants for an impact on HIV acquisition. With this large sample we did not observe any single common genetic variant that significantly associated with HIV acquisition. We further tested 22 variants previously identified by smaller studies as influencing HIV acquisition. With the exception of a deletion polymorphism in the CCR5 gene (CCR5Δ32) we found no convincing evidence to support these previous associations. Taken together these data suggest that genetic influences on HIV acquisition are either rare or have smaller effects than can be detected by this sample size.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
15537366
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
PLoS pathogens, PLoS Pathogens, Vol 9, Iss 7, p e1003515 (2013), Recercat. Dipósit de la Recerca de Catalunya, instname, PLoS Pathogens, PLoS pathogens, 9(7). Public Library of Science, Plos Pathogens, vol. 9, no. 7, pp. e1003515, Dipòsit Digital de la UB, Universidad de Barcelona
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....64366e725f49127b76d09a4aa6dbcede