PLoS ONE (Jan 2008)

Distinct genetic loci control plasma HIV-RNA and cellular HIV-DNA levels in HIV-1 infection: the ANRS Genome Wide Association 01 study.

  • Cyril Dalmasso,
  • Wassila Carpentier,
  • Laurence Meyer,
  • Christine Rouzioux,
  • Cécile Goujard,
  • Marie-Laure Chaix,
  • Olivier Lambotte,
  • Véronique Avettand-Fenoel,
  • Sigrid Le Clerc,
  • Laure Denis de Senneville,
  • Christiane Deveau,
  • Faroudy Boufassa,
  • Patrice Debré,
  • Jean-François Delfraissy,
  • Philippe Broet,
  • Ioannis Theodorou,
  • ANRS Genome Wide Association 01

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0003907
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 12
p. e3907

Abstract

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Previous studies of the HIV-1 disease have shown that HLA and Chemokine receptor genetic variants influence disease progression and early viral load. We performed a Genome Wide Association study in a cohort of 605 HIV-1-infected seroconverters for detection of novel genetic factors that influence plasma HIV-RNA and cellular HIV-DNA levels. Most of the SNPs strongly associated with HIV-RNA levels were localised in the 6p21 major histocompatibility complex (MHC) region and were in the vicinity of class I and III genes. Moreover, protective alleles for four disease-associated SNPs in the MHC locus (rs2395029, rs13199524, rs12198173 and rs3093662) were strikingly over-represented among forty-five Long Term HIV controllers. Furthermore, we show that the HIV-DNA levels (reflecting the HIV reservoir) are associated with the same four SNPs, but also with two additional SNPs on chromosome 17 (rs6503919; intergenic region flanked by the DDX40 and YPEL2 genes) and chromosome 8 (rs2575735; within the Syndecan 2 gene). Our data provide evidence that the MHC controls both HIV replication and HIV reservoir. They also indicate that two additional genomic loci may influence the HIV reservoir.