McLaren Paul J, Coulonges Cedric, Bartha István, Lenz Tobias L, Deutsch Aaron J, Bashirova Arman, Buchbinder Susan, Carrington Mary N, Cossarizza Andrea, Dalmau Judith, De Luca Andrea, Goedert James J, Gurdasani Deepti, Haas David W, Herbeck Joshua T, Johnson Eric O, Kirk Gregory D, Lambotte Olivier, Luo Ma, Mallal Simon, van Manen Daniëlle, Martinez-Picado Javier, Meyer Laurence, Miro José M, Mullins James I, Obel Niels, Poli Guido, Sandhu Manjinder S, Schuitemaker Hanneke, Shea Patrick R, Theodorou Ioannis, Walker Bruce D, Weintrob Amy C, Winkler Cheryl A, Wolinsky Steven M, Raychaudhuri Soumya, Goldstein David B, Telenti Amalio, de Bakker Paul I W, Zagury Jean-François, Fellay Jacques
Global Health Institute, School of Life Sciences, École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne, 1015 Lausanne, Switzerland; Swiss Institute of Bioinformatics, 1015 Lausanne, Switzerland;
Laboratoire Génomique, Bioinformatique, et Applications, EA4627, Chaire de Bioinformatique, Conservatoire National des Arts et Métiers, 75003 Paris, France; ANRS Genomic Group (French Agency for Research on AIDS and Hepatitis), 75013 Paris, France;
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2015 Nov 24;112(47):14658-63. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1514867112. Epub 2015 Nov 9.
Previous genome-wide association studies (GWAS) of HIV-1-infected populations have been underpowered to detect common variants with moderate impact on disease outcome and have not assessed the phenotypic variance explained by genome-wide additive effects. By combining the majority of available genome-wide genotyping data in HIV-infected populations, we tested for association between ∼8 million variants and viral load (HIV RNA copies per milliliter of plasma) in 6,315 individuals of European ancestry. The strongest signal of association was observed in the HLA class I region that was fully explained by independent effects mapping to five variable amino acid positions in the peptide binding grooves of the HLA-B and HLA-A proteins. We observed a second genome-wide significant association signal in the chemokine (C-C motif) receptor (CCR) gene cluster on chromosome 3. Conditional analysis showed that this signal could not be fully attributed to the known protective CCR5Δ32 allele and the risk P1 haplotype, suggesting further causal variants in this region. Heritability analysis demonstrated that common human genetic variation-mostly in the HLA and CCR5 regions-explains 25% of the variability in viral load. This study suggests that analyses in non-European populations and of variant classes not assessed by GWAS should be priorities for the field going forward.
以往针对HIV-1感染人群的全基因组关联研究(GWAS)检测对疾病转归有中等影响的常见变异的效能不足,且未评估全基因组加性效应所解释的表型变异。通过整合HIV感染人群中大部分可用的全基因组基因分型数据,我们在6315名欧洲血统个体中检测了约800万个变异与病毒载量(每毫升血浆中的HIV RNA拷贝数)之间的关联。在HLA I类区域观察到最强的关联信号,该信号完全由映射到HLA-B和HLA-A蛋白肽结合槽中五个可变氨基酸位置的独立效应所解释。我们在3号染色体上的趋化因子(C-C基序)受体(CCR)基因簇中观察到第二个全基因组显著的关联信号。条件分析表明,该信号不能完全归因于已知的保护性CCR5Δ32等位基因和风险P1单倍型,提示该区域存在其他因果变异。遗传力分析表明,常见的人类遗传变异——主要在HLA和CCR5区域——解释了病毒载量变异的25%。这项研究表明,对非欧洲人群以及GWAS未评估的变异类别进行分析应是该领域未来的优先事项。