Genotypes at chromosome 22q12-13 are associated with HIV-1-exposed but uninfected status in Italians |
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Authors: | Kanari Yasuyoshi Clerici Mario Abe Hiroyuki Kawabata Hiroyuki Trabattoni Daria Caputo Sergio Lo Mazzotta Francesco Fujisawa Hironori Niwa Atsuko Ishihara Chiaki Takei Yumiko A Miyazawa Masaaki |
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Affiliation: | Department of Immunology, Kinki University School of Medicine, Osaka-Sayama, Osaka, Japan. |
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Abstract: | ![]() OBJECTIVE: Despite multiple and repeated exposures to HIV-1, some individuals possess no detectable HIV genome and show T-cell memory responses to the viral antigens. HIV-1-reactive mucosal IgA detected in such uninfected individuals suggests their possible immune resistance against HIV. We tested if the above HIV-1-exposed but uninfected status was associated with genetic markers other than a homozygous deletion of the CCR5 gene. METHODS: Based on our mapping in chromosome 15 of a gene controlling the production of neutralizing antibodies in a mouse retrovirus infection, we genotyped 42 HIV-1-exposed but uninfected Italians at polymorphic loci in the syntenic segment of human chromosome 22, and compared them with 49 HIV-1-infected and 47 uninfected healthy control individuals by a closed testing procedure. RESULTS: A significant association was found between chromosome 22q12-13 genotypes and a putative dominant locus conferring anti-HIV-1 immune responses in the exposed but uninfected individuals. Distributions of linkage disequilibrium across chromosome 22 also differed between the exposed but uninfected and two other phenotypic groups. CONCLUSIONS: The data indicated the presence of a new genetic factor associated with the HIV-1-exposed but uninfected status. |
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