Polymorphisms of large effect explain the majority of the host genetic contribution to variation of HIV-1 virus load.

Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
Authors
Keywords
Abstract

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.

Year of Publication
2015
Journal
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
Volume
112
Issue
47
Pages
14658-63
Date Published
2015 Nov 24
ISSN
1091-6490
URL
DOI
10.1073/pnas.1514867112
PubMed ID
26553974
PubMed Central ID
PMC4664299
Links
Grant list
K24 AI118591 / AI / NIAID NIH HHS / United States
U01 DA036297 / DA / NIDA NIH HHS / United States
Howard Hughes Medical Institute / United States