A genome-to-genome analysis of associations between human genetic variation, HIV-1 sequence diversity, and viral control

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Abstract

HIV-1 sequence diversity is affected by selection pressures arising from host genomic factors. Using paired human and viral data from 1071 individuals, we ran >3000 genome-wide scans, testing for associations between host DNA polymorphisms, HIV-1 sequence variation and plasma viral load (VL), while considering human and viral population structure. We observed significant human SNP associations to a total of 48 HIV-1 amino acid variants (p<2.4 × 10-12). All associated SNPs mapped to the HLA class I region. Clinical relevance of host and pathogen variation was assessed using VL results. We identified two critical advantages to the use of viral variation for identifying host factors: (1) association signals are much stronger for HIV-1 sequence variants than VL, reflecting the 'intermediate phenotype' nature of viral variation; (2) association testing can be run without any clinical data. The proposed genome-to-genome approach highlights sites of genomic conflict and is a strategy generally applicable to studies of host-pathogen interaction. © Bartha et al.

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APA

Bartha, I., Carlson, J. M., Brumme, C. J., McLaren, P. J., Brumme, Z. L., John, M., … Fellay, J. (2013). A genome-to-genome analysis of associations between human genetic variation, HIV-1 sequence diversity, and viral control. ELife, 2013(2). https://doi.org/10.7554/eLife.01123

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