1. Genetic factors associated with slow progression of HIV among perinatally-infected Indian children.
- Author
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Chaudhuri RP, Neogi U, Rao SD, and Shet A
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Chemokine CXCL12 genetics, Child, Child, Preschool, Disease Progression, Female, Genetic Predisposition to Disease epidemiology, HIV Infections transmission, HLA-B Antigens genetics, HLA-B27 Antigen genetics, Humans, India epidemiology, Infectious Disease Transmission, Vertical, Male, Polymorphism, Restriction Fragment Length, Receptors, CCR5 genetics, Genetic Predisposition to Disease genetics, HIV Infections epidemiology, HIV Infections genetics
- Abstract
Objective: To study the association between common AIDS restriction genes and slow disease progression among perinatally-infected children in India., Methods: ART-naïve children were identified and selected host factors including CCR5-∆32, SDF1-3'A, CCR5-59029G, HLA-B*27, B*57 were studied using allele-specific PCR-RFLP and SSPGo HLA typing kits., Results: Among 165 children, 10 (6%) long-term non-progressors and 8 (5%) slow progressors were identified. For comparison, 12 children with normal progression of HIV were included. The frequencies of CCR5-∆32 deletion, SDF1-3'A and CCR5-59029G did not differ significantly. HLA-B*27 and B*57 were observed only in long-term non-progressors or slow progressors, who also harbored either SDF1-3'A and/or CCR5-59029G., Conclusions: There is an association between host genetic factors and slow disease progression in this population.
- Published
- 2014
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