Maternal KIR in Combination with Paternal HLA-C2 Regulate Human Birth Weight

  • Hiby S
  • Apps R
  • Chazara O
  • et al.
135Citations
Citations of this article
122Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.
Get full text

Abstract

Human birth weight is subject to stabilizing selection; babies born too small or too large are less likely to survive. Particular combinations of maternal/fetal immune system genes are associated with pregnancies where the babies are ≤5th birth weight centile, specifically an inhibitory maternal KIR AA genotype with a paternally derived fetal HLA-C2 ligand. We have now analyzed maternal KIR and fetal HLA-C combinations at the opposite end of the birth weight spectrum. Mother/baby pairs (n = 1316) were genotyped for maternal KIR as well as fetal and maternal HLA-C. Presence of a maternal-activating KIR2DS1 gene was associated with increased birth weight in linear or logistic regression analyses of all pregnancies >5th centile (p = 0.005, n = 1316). Effect of KIR2DS1 was most significant in pregnancies where its ligand, HLA-C2, was paternally but not maternally inherited by a fetus (p = 0.005, odds ratio = 2.65). Thus, maternal KIR are more frequently inhibitory with small babies but activating with big babies. At both extremes of birth weight, the KIR associations occur when their HLA-C2 ligand is paternally inherited by a fetus. We conclude that the two polymorphic immune gene systems, KIR and HLA-C, contribute to successful reproduction by maintaining birth weight between two extremes with a clear role for paternal HLA.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Hiby, S. E., Apps, R., Chazara, O., Farrell, L. E., Magnus, P., Trogstad, L., … Moffett, A. (2014). Maternal KIR in Combination with Paternal HLA-C2 Regulate Human Birth Weight. The Journal of Immunology, 192(11), 5069–5073. https://doi.org/10.4049/jimmunol.1400577

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free