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Possible influence of the mutant CCR5 allele on vertical transmission of HIV-1
Authors:Christian W. Mandl,Stephan W. Aberle,Judith H. Henkel,Elisabeth Puchhammer-Stö  ckl,Franz X. Heinz
Abstract:A possible correlation between the rate of vertical transmission of HIV-1 and the presence of the defective HIV co-receptor gene Δ32ccr5 in the chromosomes of infants born to HIV-positive mothers was assessed. The prevalence and genotypic distribution of the Δ32ccr5 gene were studied in 451 uninfected and 225 HIV-1-infected adults and 79 children born to HIV-1-positive mothers in Austria (45 uninfected and 34 infected by vertical transmission). As expected in a Caucasian population, the Δ32ccr5 allele was found in uninfected Austrians at a frequency of 10% (17.3% heterozygotes and 1.3% Δ32ccr5/Δ32ccr5 homozygotes, consistent with the expected Hardy-Weinberg distribution). The mutant allele frequency was 11.1% in uninfected children (17.8% heterozygotes, 2.2% homozygotes) and 9.6% in HIV-positive adults (19.1% heterozygotes but no Δ32ccr5/Δ32ccr5 homozygotes). Among the group of 34 vertically infected children, however, there were only two heterozygotes and no Δ32ccr5/Δ32ccr5 homozygotes, corresponding to a significantly reduced mutant allele frequency of 2.9% (P = 0.05 compared to HIV-negative children). These results suggest that CCR5/Δ32ccr5 heterozygous children are less susceptible to vertical transmission of HIV-1. The data also support the hypothesis that Δ32ccr5 homozygous individuals are resistant to HIV-1 infection. J. Med. Virol. 55:51–55, 1998. © 1998 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
Keywords:co-receptor CCR5  vertical transmission  resistance to HIV-1
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