PLoS Genetics (Jun 2017)

A chromosome 5q31.1 locus associates with tuberculin skin test reactivity in HIV-positive individuals from tuberculosis hyper-endemic regions in east Africa.

  • Rafal S Sobota,
  • Catherine M Stein,
  • Nuri Kodaman,
  • Isaac Maro,
  • Wendy Wieland-Alter,
  • Robert P Igo,
  • Albert Magohe,
  • LaShaunda L Malone,
  • Keith Chervenak,
  • Noemi B Hall,
  • Mecky Matee,
  • Harriet Mayanja-Kizza,
  • Moses Joloba,
  • Jason H Moore,
  • William K Scott,
  • Timothy Lahey,
  • W Henry Boom,
  • C Fordham von Reyn,
  • Scott M Williams,
  • Giorgio Sirugo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1006710
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 6
p. e1006710

Abstract

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One in three people has been infected with Mycobacterium tuberculosis (MTB), and the risk for MTB infection in HIV-infected individuals is even higher. We hypothesized that HIV-positive individuals living in tuberculosis-endemic regions who do not get infected by Mycobacterium tuberculosis are genetically resistant. Using an "experiment of nature" design that proved successful in our previous work, we performed a genome-wide association study of tuberculin skin test positivity using 469 HIV-positive patients from prospective study cohorts of tuberculosis from Tanzania and Uganda to identify genetic loci associated with MTB infection in the context of HIV-infection. Among these individuals, 244 tested were tuberculin skin test (TST) positive either at enrollment or during the >8 year follow up, while 225 were not. We identified a genome-wide significant association between a dominant model of rs877356 and binary TST status in the combined cohort (Odds ratio = 0.2671, p = 1.22x10-8). Association was replicated with similar significance when examining TST induration as a continuous trait. The variant lies in the 5q31.1 region, 57kb downstream from IL9. Two-locus analyses of association of variants near rs877356 showed a haplotype comprised of rs877356 and an IL9 missense variant, rs2069885, had the most significant association (p = 1.59x10-12). We also replicated previously linked loci on chromosomes 2, 5, and 11. IL9 is a cytokine produced by mast cells and TH2 cells during inflammatory responses, providing a possible link between airway inflammation and protection from MTB infection. Our results indicate that studying uninfected, HIV-positive participants with extensive exposure increases the power to detect associations in complex infectious disease.