Data di Pubblicazione:
2007
Abstract:
Understanding why some people establish and maintain effective control of HIV-1 and others do not is a priority in the effort to develop new treatments for HIV/AIDS. Using a whole-genome association strategy, we identified polymorphisms that explain nearly 15% of the variation among individuals in viral load during the asymptomatic set-point period of infection. One of these is found within an endogenous retroviral element and is associated with major histocompatibility allele human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-B*5701, whereas a second is located near the HLA-C gene. An additional analysis of the time to HIV disease progression implicated two genes, one of which encodes an RNA polymerase I subunit. These findings emphasize the importance of studying human genetic variation as a guide to combating infectious agents.
Tipologia CRIS:
1.1 Articolo in rivista
Elenco autori:
Fellay, Jacques; Shianna Kevin, V.; Ge, Dongliang; Colombo, Sara; Ledergerber, Bruno; Weale, Mike; Zhang, Kunlin; Gumbs, Curtis; Castagna, Antonella; Cossarizza, Andrea; Cozzi Lepri, Alessandro; De Luca, Andrea; Easterbrook, Philippa; Francioli, Patrick; Mallal, Simon; Martinez Picado, Javier; Miro Jose, M.; Obel, Niels; Smith Jason, P.; Wyniger, Josiane; Descombes, Patrick; Antonarakis Stylianos, E.; Letvin Norman, L.; McMichael Andrew, J.; Haynes Barton, F.; Telenti, Amalio; Goldstein David, B.
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