<i>HLA</i>and HIV-1: Heterozygote Advantage and<i>B*35</i>-<i>Cw*04</i>Disadvantage

Mary Carrington(Science Applications International Corporation (United States)), George W. Nelson(Science Applications International Corporation (United States)), Maureen P. Martin(Science Applications International Corporation (United States)), Teri L. Kissner(Science Applications International Corporation (United States)), David Vlahov(Johns Hopkins University), James J. Goedert(Center for Cancer Research), Richard A. Kaslow(University of Alabama at Birmingham), Susan Buchbinder(City College of San Francisco), Keith Hoots(Hemophilia Center of Western Pennsylvania), Stephen J. O’Brien(Science Applications International Corporation (United States))
Science
March 12, 1999
Cited by 1,224

Abstract

A selective advantage against infectious disease associated with increased heterozygosity at the human major histocompatibility complex [human leukocyte antigen (HLA) class I and class II] is believed to play a major role in maintaining the extraordinary allelic diversity of these genes. Maximum HLA heterozygosity of class I loci (A, B, and C) delayed acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) onset among patients infected with human immunodeficiency virus-type 1 (HIV-1), whereas individuals who were homozygous for one or more loci progressed rapidly to AIDS and death. The HLA class I alleles B*35 and Cw*04 were consistently associated with rapid development of AIDS-defining conditions in Caucasians. The extended survival of 28 to 40 percent of HIV-1-infected Caucasian patients who avoided AIDS for ten or more years can be attributed to their being fully heterozygous at HLA class I loci, to their lacking the AIDS-associated alleles B*35 and Cw*04, or to both.


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