BMC Infectious Diseases (May 2008)

<it>MBL2 </it>and Hepatitis C Virus Infection among Injection Drug Users

  • Edlin Brian R,
  • Yeager Meredith,
  • Xiao Nianqing,
  • Tseng Fan-Chen,
  • Bernig Toralf,
  • Zarin-Pass Rebecca,
  • Zhang Mingdong,
  • Brown Elizabeth E,
  • Chanock Stephen J,
  • O'Brien Thomas R

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1471-2334-8-57
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 1
p. 57

Abstract

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Abstract Background Genetic variations in MBL2 that reduce circulating levels and alter functional properties of the mannose binding lectin (MBL) have been associated with many autoimmune and infectious diseases. We examined whether MBL2 variants influence the outcome of hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection. Methods Participants were enrolled in the Urban Health Study of San Francisco Bay area injection drug users (IDU) during 1998 through 2000. Study subjects who had a positive test for HCV antibody were eligible for the current study. Participants who were positive for HCV RNA were frequency matched to those who were negative for HCV RNA on the basis of ethnicity and duration of IDU. Genotyping was performed for 15 single nucleotide polymorphisms in MBL2. Statistical analyses of European American and African American participants were conducted separately. Results The analysis included 198 study subjects who were positive for HCV antibody, but negative for HCV RNA, and 654 IDUs who were positive for both antibody and virus. There was no significant association between any of the genetic variants that cause MBL deficiency and the presence of HCV RNA. Unexpectedly, the MBL2 -289X promoter genotype, which causes MBL deficiency, was over-represented among European Americans who were HCV RNA negative (OR = 1.65, 95% CI 1.05–2.58), although not among the African Americans. Conclusion This study found no association between genetic variants that cause MBL deficiency and the presence of HCV RNA. The observation that MBL2 -289X was associated with the absence of HCV RNA in European Americans requires validation.