Browsing by Subject "HLA-C Antigens"
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Item Open Access Host determinants of HIV-1 control in African Americans.(J Infect Dis, 2010-04-15) Pelak, Kimberly; Goldstein, David B; Walley, Nicole M; Fellay, Jacques; Ge, Dongliang; Shianna, Kevin V; Gumbs, Curtis; Gao, Xiaojiang; Maia, Jessica M; Cronin, Kenneth D; Hussain, Shehnaz K; Carrington, Mary; Michael, Nelson L; Weintrob, Amy C; Infectious Disease Clinical Research Program HIV Working Group; National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Center for HIV/AIDS Vaccine Immunology (CHAVI)We performed a whole-genome association study of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) set point among a cohort of African Americans (n = 515), and an intronic single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) in the HLA-B gene showed one of the strongest associations. We use a subset of patients to demonstrate that this SNP reflects the effect of the HLA-B*5703 allele, which shows a genome-wide statistically significant association with viral load set point (P = 5.6 x 10(-10)). These analyses therefore confirm a member of the HLA-B*57 group of alleles as the most important common variant that influences viral load variation in African Americans, which is consistent with what has been observed for individuals of European ancestry, among whom the most important common variant is HLA-B*5701.Item Open Access Influence of HLA-C expression level on HIV control.(Science, 2013-04-05) Apps, Richard; Qi, Ying; Carlson, Jonathan M; Chen, Haoyan; Gao, Xiaojiang; Thomas, Rasmi; Yuki, Yuko; Del Prete, Greg Q; Goulder, Philip; Brumme, Zabrina L; Brumme, Chanson J; John, Mina; Mallal, Simon; Nelson, George; Bosch, Ronald; Heckerman, David; Stein, Judy L; Soderberg, Kelly A; Moody, M Anthony; Denny, Thomas N; Zeng, Xue; Fang, Jingyuan; Moffett, Ashley; Lifson, Jeffrey D; Goedert, James J; Buchbinder, Susan; Kirk, Gregory D; Fellay, Jacques; McLaren, Paul; Deeks, Steven G; Pereyra, Florencia; Walker, Bruce; Michael, Nelson L; Weintrob, Amy; Wolinsky, Steven; Liao, Wilson; Carrington, MaryA variant upstream of human leukocyte antigen C (HLA-C) shows the most significant genome-wide effect on HIV control in European Americans and is also associated with the level of HLA-C expression. We characterized the differential cell surface expression levels of all common HLA-C allotypes and tested directly for effects of HLA-C expression on outcomes of HIV infection in 5243 individuals. Increasing HLA-C expression was associated with protection against multiple outcomes independently of individual HLA allelic effects in both African and European Americans, regardless of their distinct HLA-C frequencies and linkage relationships with HLA-B and HLA-A. Higher HLA-C expression was correlated with increased likelihood of cytotoxic T lymphocyte responses and frequency of viral escape mutation. In contrast, high HLA-C expression had a deleterious effect in Crohn's disease, suggesting a broader influence of HLA expression levels in human disease.