Genetic polymorphism of CCR5 gene and HIV disease:: the heterozygous (CCR5/Δccr5) genotype is neither essential nor sufficient for protection against disease progression

被引:34
|
作者
Morawetz, RA
Rizzardi, GP
Glauser, D
Rutschmann, O
Hirschel, B
Perrin, L
Opravil, M
Flepp, M
von Overbeck, J
Glauser, MP
Ghezzi, S
Vicenzi, E
Poli, G
Lazzarin, A
Pantaleo, G
机构
[1] CHU Vaudois, Hop Beaumont, Div Infect Dis, Dept Internal Med,Lab AIDS Immunopathogenesis, CH-1011 Lausanne, Switzerland
[2] Hop Univ Geneve, Div Infect Dis, Dept Med, Geneva, Switzerland
[3] Hop Univ Geneve, Cent Lab Virol, Geneva, Switzerland
[4] Univ Zurich Hosp, Dept Med, Div Infect Dis, CH-8091 Zurich, Switzerland
[5] San Raffaele Sci Inst, Dipartimento Biotecnol, AIDS Immunopathogenesis Unit, I-20132 Milan, Italy
[6] San Raffaele Sci Inst, Dept Infect Dis, I-20132 Milan, Italy
关键词
CCR-5; polymorphism; long-term nonprogressor; HIV disease progression;
D O I
10.1002/eji.1830271220
中图分类号
R392 [医学免疫学]; Q939.91 [免疫学];
学科分类号
100102 ;
摘要
Homozygous (Delta ccr5/Delta ccr5) and heterozygous (CCR5/Delta ccr5) deletions in the beta-chemokine receptor 5 (CCR5) gene, which encodes for the major co-receptor for macrophage-tropic HIV-1 entry, have been implicated in resistance to HIV infection and in protection against disease progression, respectively. The CCR5/Delta ccr5 genotype was found more frequently in long-term nonprogressors (LTNP) (31.0%) than in progressors (10.6% p < 0.0001), in agreement with previous studies. Kaplan-Meier survival analyses showed that a slower progression of disease, i.e. higher proportion of subjects with CD4(+) T cell counts > 500/mu l (p = 0.0006) and a trend toward a slower progression to AIDS (p = 0.077), was associated with the CCR5/Delta ccr5 genotype. However, when LTNP were analyzed separetely, no significant differences in CD4(+) T cell counts (p = 0.12) and viremia levels (p = 0.65) were observed between the wild-type (69% of LTNP) and the heterozygous (31.0%) genotypes. Therefore, there are other factors which play a major role in determining the status of nonprogression in the majority of LTNP. Furthermore, there was no evidence that the CCR5/Delta ccr5 genotype was associated with different rates of disease progression in the group of progressors. Taken together, these results indicate that the CCR5/Delta ccr5 genotype is neither essential nor sufficient for protection against the progression of HIV disease.
引用
收藏
页码:3223 / 3227
页数:5
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Host genes and HIV: The role of the chemokine receptor gene CCR5 and its allele (Delta 32 CCR5)
    McNicholl, JM
    Smith, DK
    Qari, SH
    Hodge, T
    EMERGING INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 1997, 3 (03) : 261 - 271
  • [32] CCR5 expression on melanoma cells affects the disease progression
    Hino, R.
    Fueki-Yoshioka, H.
    Yoshiki, R.
    Nakamura, M.
    JOURNAL OF INVESTIGATIVE DERMATOLOGY, 2012, 132 : S129 - S129
  • [33] Concerted evolution of vertebrate CCR2 and CCR5 genes and the origin of a recombinant equine CCR5/2 gene
    Perelygin, Andrey A.
    Zharkikh, Andrey A.
    Astakhova, Natalia M.
    Lear, Teri L.
    Brinton, Margo A.
    JOURNAL OF HEREDITY, 2008, 99 (05) : 500 - 511
  • [34] CCR5AS lncRNA variation differentially regulates CCR5, influencing HIV disease outcome
    Kulkarni, Smita
    Lied, Alexandra
    Kulkarni, Viraj
    Rucevic, Marijana
    Martin, Maureen P.
    Walker-Sperling, Victoria
    Anderson, Stephen K.
    Ewy, Rodger
    Singh, Sukhvinder
    Nguyen, Hoang
    McLaren, Paul J.
    Viard, Mathias
    Naranbhai, Vivek
    Zou, Chengcheng
    Lin, Zhansong
    Gatanaga, Hiroyuki
    Oka, Shinichi
    Takiguchi, Masafumi
    Thio, Chloe L.
    Margolick, Joseph
    Kirk, Gregory D.
    Goedert, James J.
    Hoots, W. Keith
    Deeks, Steven G.
    Haas, David W.
    Michael, Nelson
    Walker, Bruce
    Le Gall, Sylvie
    Chowdhury, Fatema Z.
    Yu, Xu G.
    Carrington, Mary
    NATURE IMMUNOLOGY, 2019, 20 (07) : 824 - +
  • [35] The frequency of CCR5 promoter polymorphisms and CCR5 Δ 32 mutation in Iranian populations
    Zare-Bidaki, Mohammad
    Karimi-Googheri, Masoud
    Hassanshahi, Gholamhossein
    Zainodini, Nahid
    Arababadi, Mohammad Kazemi
    IRANIAN JOURNAL OF BASIC MEDICAL SCIENCES, 2015, 18 (04) : 312 - 316
  • [36] Contrasting genetic influence of CCR2 and CCR5 variants on HIV-1 infection and disease progression
    Smith, MW
    Dean, M
    Carrington, M
    Winkler, C
    Huttley, GA
    Lomb, DA
    Goedert, JJ
    OBrien, TR
    Jacobson, LP
    Kaslow, R
    Buchbinder, S
    Vittinghoff, E
    Vlahov, D
    Hoots, K
    Hilgartner, MW
    OBrien, SJ
    SCIENCE, 1997, 277 (5328) : 959 - 965
  • [37] CCR5AS lncRNA variation differentially regulates CCR5, influencing HIV disease outcome
    Smita Kulkarni
    Alexandra Lied
    Viraj Kulkarni
    Marijana Rucevic
    Maureen P. Martin
    Victoria Walker-Sperling
    Stephen K. Anderson
    Rodger Ewy
    Sukhvinder Singh
    Hoang Nguyen
    Paul J. McLaren
    Mathias Viard
    Vivek Naranbhai
    Chengcheng Zou
    Zhansong Lin
    Hiroyuki Gatanaga
    Shinichi Oka
    Masafumi Takiguchi
    Chloe L. Thio
    Joseph Margolick
    Gregory D. Kirk
    James J. Goedert
    W. Keith Hoots
    Steven G. Deeks
    David W. Haas
    Nelson Michael
    Bruce Walker
    Sylvie Le Gall
    Fatema Z. Chowdhury
    Xu G. Yu
    Mary Carrington
    Nature Immunology, 2019, 20 : 824 - 834
  • [38] Effects of CC chemokine receptor 5 (CCR5) inhibitors on the dynamics of CCR5 and CC-chemokine-CCR5 interactions
    Nakata, Hirotomo
    Kruhlak, Michael
    Kamata, Wakako
    Ogata-Aoki, Hiromi
    Li, Jianfeng
    Maeda, Kenji
    Ghosh, Arun K.
    Mitsuya, Hiroaki
    ANTIVIRAL THERAPY, 2010, 15 (03) : 321 - 331
  • [39] Editing CCR5 gene to confer HIV resistance
    Riaz, Haris
    JOURNAL OF PIONEERING MEDICAL SCIENCES, 2014, 4 (03): : 102 - 102
  • [40] CCR5 and inflammatory storm
    Lin, Yuting
    Liu, Shasha
    Sun, Yang
    Chen, Chen
    Yang, Songwei
    Pei, Gang
    Lin, Meiyu
    Yu, Jingbo
    Liu, Xuan
    Wang, Huiqin
    Long, Junpeng
    Yan, Qian
    Liang, Jinping
    Yao, Jiao
    Yi, Fan
    Meng, Lei
    Tan, Yong
    Chen, Naihong
    Yang, Yantao
    Ai, Qidi
    AGEING RESEARCH REVIEWS, 2024, 96