Influence of HLA class I, HLA class II and KIRs on vertical transmission and chronicity of hepatitis C virus in children

被引:7
|
作者
Ruiz-Extremera, A. [1 ,2 ,3 ,4 ,5 ]
Pavon-Castillero, E. J. [5 ,6 ]
Florido, M. [6 ]
Munoz de Rueda, P. [4 ,5 ,6 ]
Munoz-Gamez, J. A. [5 ,6 ]
Casado, J. [5 ,6 ]
Carazo, A. [5 ,6 ]
Quiles, R. [4 ,5 ,6 ]
Jimenez-Ruiz, S. M. [6 ,7 ]
Gila, A. [4 ,5 ,6 ]
Luna, J. D. [5 ,8 ]
Leon, J. [4 ,5 ,6 ]
Salmeron, J. [4 ,5 ,6 ,7 ]
机构
[1] San Cecilio Univ Hosp, Paediat Unit, Granada, Spain
[2] Virgen de las Nieves Univ Hosp, Granada, Spain
[3] Univ Granada, Dept Paediat, Granada, Spain
[4] Inst Salud Carlos III, CIBER Liver & Digest Dis CIBERehd, Madrid, Spain
[5] Inst Invest Biosanitaria Granada, Granada, Spain
[6] San Cecilio Univ Hosp, Res Unit, Clin Management Unit Digest Dis, Granada, Spain
[7] Univ Granada, Dept Med, Granada, Spain
[8] Univ Granada, Biostat Dept, Granada, Spain
来源
PLOS ONE | 2017年 / 12卷 / 02期
关键词
PREGNANT-WOMEN; GENETIC-FACTORS; INFECTION; RISK; COMBINATION; CLEARANCE; RIBAVIRIN; RECEPTOR; DISEASE; IL28B;
D O I
10.1371/journal.pone.0172527
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Background & aim There is evidence that maternal viral load of HCV during delivery influences the risk for Mother-to-child transmission (MTCT), but this does not explain all cases. We study the role of the immunogenetic profile (HLA, KIRs and KIR-ligand binding) of mothers and children in HCV-MTCT and in chronicity in the children. Methodology 79 HCV-RNA (+) mothers and their 98 children were included. 24 children were infected, becoming chronic in 8 cases and clearing in 16. HLA-class-I and II and KIRs were determined by Luminex. Results MTCT study: The presence of HLA-C1-ligand in mothers and/or their children reduces the risk of transmission (mothers: Pc = 0.011, children: P = 0.033), whereas the presence of HLA-C2C2-ligand in mothers increases it (Pc = 0.011). In children KIR2DL3-HLA-C1 is a protector factor (Pc = 0.011). Chronicity in children study: Maternal DQA1*01 allele (Pc = 0.027), KIR2DS1 (Pc = 0.011) or KIR3DS1 (Pc = 0.011) favours chronicity in the child. The presence of the DQB1*03 allele (Pc = 0.027) and KIR2DS3 (P = 0.056) in the child and homozygosity for KIR3DL1/3DL1 (Pc = 0.011) and for the HLA-Bw4/Bw4 ligand (P = 0.027) is associated with viral clearance, whereas the presence of HLA-Bw6 ligand (P = 0.027), the binding of KIR3DS1-HLA-Bw4 (P = 0.037) and heterozygosity for KIR3DL1/3DS1 (Pc = 0.011) favour viral chronicity. Mother/child allele matching: In the joint HLA analysis, matching was greater between mothers and children with chronic infection vs those who had cleared the virus (67%+/- 4.1 vs 57%+/- 1.2, P = 0.003). Conclusions The HLA-C1 ligand in the mother is related to MTCT, while several genetic factors of the mother or child are involved in the chronification or clearance of infection in the child. Matching allelic data is considered to be an indicator of HCV chronicity in the child and can be used as a potential prognostic test. This implies that NK cells may play a previously undocumented role in protecting against MTCT and that both NK cell immunity and adaptive T-cell responses may influence viral clearance in infected children.
引用
收藏
页数:15
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] Good kidney transplant outcome in recipients with presensitization against HLA class II but not HLA class I
    Süsal, C
    Opelz, G
    HUMAN IMMUNOLOGY, 2004, 65 (08) : 810 - 816
  • [42] Differential Effect of Bortezomib on HLA Class I and Class II Antibody
    Philogene, Mary Carmelle
    Sikorski, Paul
    Montgomery, Robert A.
    Leffell, Mary S.
    Zachary, Andrea A.
    TRANSPLANTATION, 2014, 98 (06) : 660 - 665
  • [43] HLA class I and class II antigen frequencies in multiple myeloma
    Alcoceba, M.
    Marin, L. A.
    Balanzategui, A.
    Martin-Jimenez, P.
    Sarasquete, M. E.
    Chillon, C.
    Corral, R.
    Garcia-Sanz, R.
    Gonzalez, M.
    TISSUE ANTIGENS, 2007, 69 (05): : 454 - 454
  • [44] A comprehensive study on HLA class I and class II alleles in Japanese
    Tokunaga, K
    Ishikawa, Y
    Ogawa, A
    Wang, HR
    Mitsunaga, S
    Moriyama, S
    Lin, L
    Bannai, M
    Watanabe, Y
    Kashiwase, K
    Tanaka, H
    Akaza, T
    Tadokoro, K
    Juji, T
    HUMAN IMMUNOLOGY, 1996, 47 (1-2) : P561 - P561
  • [45] The associations of HLA class I and class II alleles in bullous pemphigoid
    Fang, H.
    Shen, S.
    Dang, E.
    Zhang, J.
    Wang, G.
    JOURNAL OF INVESTIGATIVE DERMATOLOGY, 2017, 137 (05) : S3 - S3
  • [46] Molecular typing of HLA Class I and Class II for a transplantation programme
    Bendukidze, N
    Hána, I
    Ivasková, E
    BONE MARROW TRANSPLANTATION, 1998, 22 : S31 - S33
  • [47] HLA class I and class II allele and haplotype diversity in Martinicans
    Bera, O
    Cesaire, R
    Quelvennec, E
    Quillivic, F
    de Chavigny, V
    Ribal, C
    Semana, G
    TISSUE ANTIGENS, 2001, 57 (03): : 200 - 207
  • [48] HLA CLASS-I AND CLASS-II EXPRESSION IN RHABDOMYOSARCOMAS
    FERNANDEZ, JE
    CONCHA, A
    ARANEGA, A
    RUIZCABELLO, F
    CABRERA, T
    GARRIDO, F
    IMMUNOBIOLOGY, 1991, 182 (05) : 440 - 448
  • [49] HLA class I and class II polymorphism in the population of Rijeka, Croatia
    Crnic-Martinovic, M
    Vujaklija-Stipanovic, K
    Ristic, S
    Fucak, M
    Kapovic, M
    Weiner, M
    Sepcic, J
    COLLEGIUM ANTROPOLOGICUM, 2002, 26 (01) : 69 - 75
  • [50] HLA Class I and Class II Polymorphism in the Population of Vojvodina, Serbia
    Vojvodic, Svetlana
    Ademovic-Sazdanic, Dusica
    COLLEGIUM ANTROPOLOGICUM, 2012, 36 (04) : 1379 - 1384