Association Study of Common Genetic Variants and HIV-1 Acquisition in 6,300 Infected Cases and 7,200 Controls

Author

McLaren, Paul J.

Coulonges, Cédric

Ripke, Stephan

van den Berg, Leonard

Buchbinder, Susan

Carrington, Mary

Cossarizza, Andrea

Dalmau, Judith

Deeks, Steven G.

Delaneau, Olivier

Luca, Andrea De

Goedert, James J.

Haas, David W.

Herbeck, Joshua T.

Kathiresan, Sekar

Kirk, Gregory D.

Lambotte, Olivier

Luo, Ma

Mallal, Simon

van Manen, Daniëlle

Martínez Picado, Francisco Javier

Meyer, Laurence

Miró Meda, José M. (José María), 1956-

Mullins, James I.

Obel, Niels

O'Brien, Stephen J.

Pereyra, Florencia

Plummer, Francis A.

Poli, Guido

Qi, Ying

Rucart, Pierre

Sandhu, Manjinder S.

Shea, Patrick R.

Schuitemaker, Hanneke

Theodorou, Ioannis

Vannberg, Fredrik

Veldink, Jan

Walker, Bruce D.

Weintrob, Amy

Winkler, Cheryl A.

Publication date

2020-01-14T11:26:25Z

2020-01-14T11:26:25Z

2013-07-25

2020-01-14T11:26:25Z

Abstract

Multiple genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have been performed in HIV-1 infected individuals, identifying common genetic influences on viral control and disease course. Similarly, common genetic correlates of acquisition of HIV-1 after exposure have been interrogated using GWAS, although in generally small samples. Under the auspices of the International Collaboration for the Genomics of HIV, we have combined the genome-wide single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) data collected by 25 cohorts, studies, or institutions on HIV-1 infected individuals and compared them to carefully matched population-level data sets (a list of all collaborators appears in Note S1 in Text S1). After imputation using the 1,000 Genomes Project reference panel, we tested approximately 8 million common DNA variants (SNPs and indels) for association with HIV-1 acquisition in 6,334 infected patients and 7,247 population samples of European ancestry. Initial association testing identified the SNP rs4418214, the C allele of which is known to tag the HLA-B*57:01 and B*27:05 alleles, as genome-wide significant (p = 3.6×10−11). However, restricting analysis to individuals with a known date of seroconversion suggested that this association was due to the frailty bias in studies of lethal diseases. Further analyses including testing recessive genetic models, testing for bulk effects of non-genome-wide significant variants, stratifying by sexual or parenteral transmission risk and testing previously reported associations showed no evidence for genetic influence on HIV-1 acquisition (with the exception of CCR5Δ32 homozygosity). Thus, these data suggest that genetic influences on HIV acquisition are either rare or have smaller effects than can be detected by this sample size.

Document Type

Article
Published version

Language

English

Subjects and keywords

VIH (Virus); Malalties infeccioses; HIV (Viruses); Communicable diseases

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1003515

PLoS Pathogens, 2013, vol. 9, num. 7, p. e1003515

https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.ppat.1003515

Rights

cc-by (c) McLaren, Paul J. et al., 2013

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es