Back to Search Start Over

CLEC4E (Mincle) genetic variation associates with pulmonary tuberculosis in Guinea-Bissau (West Africa)

Authors :
Marquitta J. White
Cinzia Ciccacci
Lindsay N. Sausville
Scott M. Williams
Alessandra Tacconelli
Giorgio Sirugo
Gloria Tavera
Anders Solitander Bohlbro
Christian Wejse
Rafal S. Sobota
Jasmine M. Olvany
Source :
Infect Genet Evol, Olvany, J M, Sausville, L N, White, M J, Tacconelli, A, Tavera, G, Sobota, R S, Ciccacci, C, Bohlbro, A S, Wejse, C, Williams, S M & Sirugo, G 2020, ' CLEC4E (Mincle) genetic variation associates with pulmonary tuberculosis in Guinea-Bissau (West Africa) ', Infection, Genetics and Evolution, vol. 85, 104560 . https://doi.org/10.1016/j.meegid.2020.104560
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Tuberculosis (TB) is the leading cause of death from a single infectious agent. According to the WHO, 85% of cases in 2018 were pulmonary tuberculosis (PTB), making it the most prevalent form of the disease. Although the bacillus responsible for disease, Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MTB), is estimated to infect 1.7 billion people worldwide, only a small portion of those infected (5-10%) will transition into active TB. Because such a small fraction of infected people develop active disease, we hypothesized that underlying host genetic variation associates with developing active pulmonary disease. Variation in CLEC4E has been of interest in previous association studies showing either no effect or protection from PTB. For our study we assessed 60 SNPs in 11 immune genes, including CLEC4E, using a case-control study from Guinea-Bissau. The 289 cases and 322 controls differed in age, sex, and ethnicity all of which were included in adjusted models. Initial association analysis with unadjusted logistic regression revealed putative association with nine SNPs (p < 0.1). Any SNP that was significant below a p-value of 0.05 was then assessed in an adjusted model. Of the six SNPs that remained significant, three of them were assigned to the CLEC4E gene (rs12302046, rs10841847, and rs11046143). Of these, only rs10841847 passed FDR adjustment for multiple testing. Adjusted regression analyses showed that the minor allele at rs10841847 associated with higher risk of developing PTB (OR = 1.55, CI = 1.22-1.96, p-value = 0.00036). Based on these initial association tests, CLEC4E seemed to be the predictor of interest for PTB risk in this population. Haplotype analysis (2-SNP and 3-SNP windows) showed that minor alleles in segments including rs10841847 were the only ones to pass the threshold of global significance, compared to other haplotypes (p-value < 0.05). Linkage disequilibrium patterns showed that rs12302046 is in high LD with rs10841847 (r2 = 0.67), and all other SNPs lost significance when adjusted for rs10841847 effects. These findings indicate that rs10841847 in CLEC4E is the single best predictor of pulmonary tuberculosis risk in our study population. These results provide evidence for the hypothesis that genetic variation of CLEC4E influences risk to TB in Guinea-Bissau.

Details

ISSN :
15677257
Volume :
85
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Infection, genetics and evolution : journal of molecular epidemiology and evolutionary genetics in infectious diseases
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....a038bef1630e0c369b6e35c88fcc5b3b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.meegid.2020.104560