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Genome-wide association study reveals genetic variants associated with HIV-1C infection in a Botswana study population.

Shevchenko AK, Zhernakova DV, Malov SV et al.

34782459 PubMed ID
GWAS Study Type
430 Participants
54 Views
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Chapter I

Publication Details

Comprehensive information about this research publication

Authors

SA
Shevchenko AK
ZD
Zhernakova DV
MS
Malov SV
KA
Komissarov A
KS
Kolchanova SM
TG
Tamazian G
AA
Antonik A
CN
Cherkasov N
KS
Kliver S
TA
Turenko A
RM
Rotkevich M
EI
Evsyukov I
VD
Vlahov D
TP
Thami PK
GS
Gaseitsiwe S
NV
Novitsky V
EM
Essex M
OS
O'Brien SJ
Chapter II

Abstract

Summary of the research findings

Although there have been many studies of gene variant association with different stages of HIV/AIDS progression in United States and European cohorts, few gene-association studies have assessed genic determinants in sub-Saharan African populations, which have the highest density of HIV infections worldwide. We carried out genome-wide association studies on 766 study participants at risk for HIV-1 subtype C (HIV-1C) infection in Botswana. Three gene associations (AP3B1, PTPRA, and NEO1) were shown to have significant association with HIV-1C acquisition. Each gene association was replicated within Botswana or in the United States-African American or United States-European American AIDS cohorts or in both. Each associated gene has a prior reported influence on HIV/AIDS pathogenesis. Thirteen previously discovered AIDS restriction genes were further replicated in the Botswana cohorts, extending our confidence in these prior AIDS restriction gene reports. This work presents an early step toward the identification of genetic variants associated with and affecting HIV acquisition or AIDS progression in the understudied HIV-1C afflicted Botswana population.

194 Sub-Saharan African ancestry cases, 236 Sub-Saharan African ancestry controls

Chapter III

Study Statistics

Key metrics and study information

430
Total Participants
GWAS
Study Type
No
Replicated
Sub-Saharan African
Ancestry
Botswana
Recruitment Country
Chapter IV

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