Department of Genetics and Medicine, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA 94305, USA.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2012 Feb 21;109(8):2972-7. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1121006109. Epub 2012 Feb 6.
The outcome of exposure to infectious microbes or their toxins is influenced by both microbial and host genes. Some host genes encode defense mechanisms, whereas others assist pathogen functions. Genomic analyses have associated host gene mutations with altered infectious disease susceptibility, but evidence for causality is limited. Here we demonstrate that human genetic variation affecting capillary morphogenesis gene 2 (CMG2), which encodes a host membrane protein exploited by anthrax toxin as a principal receptor, dramatically alters toxin sensitivity. Lymphoblastoid cells derived from a HapMap Project cohort of 234 persons of African, European, or Asian ancestry differed in sensitivity mediated by the protective antigen (PA) moiety of anthrax toxin by more than four orders of magnitude, with 99% of the cohort showing a 250-fold range of sensitivity. We find that relative sensitivity is an inherited trait that correlates strongly with CMG2 mRNA abundance in cells of each ethnic/geographical group and in the combined population pool (P = 4 × 10(-11)). The extent of CMG2 expression in transfected murine macrophages and human lymphoblastoid cells affected anthrax toxin binding, internalization, and sensitivity. A CMG2 single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) occurring frequently in African and European populations independently altered toxin uptake, but was not statistically associated with altered sensitivity in HapMap cell populations. Our results reveal extensive human diversity in cell lethality dependent on PA-mediated toxin binding and uptake, and identify individual differences in CMG2 expression level as a determinant of this diversity. Testing of genomically characterized human cell populations may offer a broadly useful strategy for elucidating effects of genetic variation on infectious disease susceptibility.
暴露于传染性微生物或其毒素的结果受到微生物和宿主基因的影响。一些宿主基因编码防御机制,而另一些则辅助病原体的功能。基因组分析已经将宿主基因突变与改变的传染病易感性联系起来,但因果关系的证据有限。在这里,我们证明了影响毛细血管形态发生基因 2(CMG2)的人类遗传变异,该基因编码炭疽毒素用作主要受体的宿主膜蛋白,极大地改变了毒素的敏感性。从 234 名非洲、欧洲或亚洲血统的 HapMap 项目队列中的淋巴细胞系衍生的细胞在由炭疽毒素的保护性抗原(PA)部分介导的敏感性方面差异超过四个数量级,99%的队列显示出 250 倍的敏感性范围。我们发现相对敏感性是一种遗传特征,与每个种族/地理群体的细胞中的 CMG2 mRNA 丰度以及混合人群池密切相关(P = 4×10(-11))。转染的鼠巨噬细胞和人淋巴母细胞系中 CMG2 的表达程度影响炭疽毒素的结合、内化和敏感性。在非洲和欧洲人群中经常发生的 CMG2 单核苷酸多态性(SNP)独立地改变了毒素摄取,但在 HapMap 细胞群体中与敏感性改变没有统计学关联。我们的结果揭示了依赖于 PA 介导的毒素结合和摄取的细胞致死性的人类多样性,并确定 CMG2 表达水平的个体差异是这种多样性的决定因素。对基因组特征明确的人类细胞群体进行测试可能提供一种广泛有用的策略,用于阐明遗传变异对传染病易感性的影响。