Host determinants of HIV-1 control in African Americans.

Abstract

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-B5703 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-B57 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.

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Citation

Published Version (Please cite this version)

10.1086/651382

Publication Info

Pelak, Kimberly, David B Goldstein, Nicole M Walley, Jacques Fellay, Dongliang Ge, Kevin V Shianna, Curtis Gumbs, Xiaojiang Gao, et al. (2010). Host determinants of HIV-1 control in African Americans. J Infect Dis, 201(8). pp. 1141–1149. 10.1086/651382 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/4146.

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