International Journal of Molecular Sciences (Nov 2022)

Increased Prevalence of Unstable HLA-C Variants in HIV-1 Rapid-Progressor Patients

  • Chiara Stefani,
  • Antonella Sangalli,
  • Elena Locatelli,
  • Tania Federico,
  • Giovanni Malerba,
  • Maria Grazia Romanelli,
  • Gustavo Adolfo Argañaraz,
  • Bosco Christiano Maciel Da Silva,
  • Alberto Jose Duarte Da Silva,
  • Jorge Casseb,
  • Enrique Roberto Argañaraz,
  • Alessandra Ruggiero,
  • Donato Zipeto

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/ijms232314852
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 23
p. 14852

Abstract

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HIV-1 infection in the absence of treatment results in progression toward AIDS. Host genetic factors play a role in HIV-1 pathogenesis, but complete knowledge is not yet available. Since less-expressed HLA-C variants are associated with poor HIV-1 control and unstable HLA-C variants are associated with higher HIV-1 infectivity, we investigated whether there was a correlation between the different stages of HIV-1 progression and the presence of specific HLA-C allotypes. HLA-C genotyping was performed using allele-specific PCR by analyzing a treatment-naïve cohort of 96 HIV-1-infected patients from multicentric cohorts in the USA, Canada, and Brazil. HIV-1-positive subjects were classified according to their different disease progression status as progressors (Ps, n = 48), long-term non-progressors (LTNPs, n = 37), and elite controllers (ECs, n = 11). HLA-C variants were classified as stable or unstable according to their binding stability to β2-microglobulin/peptide complex. Our results showed a significant correlation between rapid progression to AIDS and the presence of two or one unstable HLA-C variants (p-value: 0.0078, p-value: 0.0143, respectively). These findings strongly suggest a link between unstable HLA-C variants both at genotype and at allele levels and rapid progression to AIDS. This work provides further insights into the impact of host genetic factors on AIDS progression.

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