DBP rs16846876 and rs12512631 polymorphisms are associated with progression to AIDS naïve HIV-infected patients: a retrospective study

Abstract Background Most of the circulating Vitamin D (VitD) is transported bound to vitamin D-binding protein (DBP), and several DBP single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) have been related to circulating VitD concentration and disease. In this study, we evaluated the association among DBP SNPs and...

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Main Authors: María Ángeles JIMÉNEZ-SOUSA, José Luis JIMÉNEZ, Amanda FERNÁNDEZ-RODRÍGUEZ, José María BELLÓN, Carmen RODRÍGUEZ, Melchor RIERA, Joaquín PORTILLA, Ángeles CASTRO, María Ángeles MUÑOZ-FERNÁNDEZ, Salvador RESINO
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-10-01
Series:Journal of Biomedical Science
Subjects:
DBP
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12929-019-0577-y
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author María Ángeles JIMÉNEZ-SOUSA
José Luis JIMÉNEZ
Amanda FERNÁNDEZ-RODRÍGUEZ
José María BELLÓN
Carmen RODRÍGUEZ
Melchor RIERA
Joaquín PORTILLA
Ángeles CASTRO
María Ángeles MUÑOZ-FERNÁNDEZ
Salvador RESINO
spellingShingle María Ángeles JIMÉNEZ-SOUSA
José Luis JIMÉNEZ
Amanda FERNÁNDEZ-RODRÍGUEZ
José María BELLÓN
Carmen RODRÍGUEZ
Melchor RIERA
Joaquín PORTILLA
Ángeles CASTRO
María Ángeles MUÑOZ-FERNÁNDEZ
Salvador RESINO
DBP rs16846876 and rs12512631 polymorphisms are associated with progression to AIDS naïve HIV-infected patients: a retrospective study
Journal of Biomedical Science
Single nucleotide polymorphisms
DBP
LTNPs
AIDS
Non-progression
author_facet María Ángeles JIMÉNEZ-SOUSA
José Luis JIMÉNEZ
Amanda FERNÁNDEZ-RODRÍGUEZ
José María BELLÓN
Carmen RODRÍGUEZ
Melchor RIERA
Joaquín PORTILLA
Ángeles CASTRO
María Ángeles MUÑOZ-FERNÁNDEZ
Salvador RESINO
author_sort María Ángeles JIMÉNEZ-SOUSA
title DBP rs16846876 and rs12512631 polymorphisms are associated with progression to AIDS naïve HIV-infected patients: a retrospective study
title_short DBP rs16846876 and rs12512631 polymorphisms are associated with progression to AIDS naïve HIV-infected patients: a retrospective study
title_full DBP rs16846876 and rs12512631 polymorphisms are associated with progression to AIDS naïve HIV-infected patients: a retrospective study
title_fullStr DBP rs16846876 and rs12512631 polymorphisms are associated with progression to AIDS naïve HIV-infected patients: a retrospective study
title_full_unstemmed DBP rs16846876 and rs12512631 polymorphisms are associated with progression to AIDS naïve HIV-infected patients: a retrospective study
title_sort dbp rs16846876 and rs12512631 polymorphisms are associated with progression to aids naïve hiv-infected patients: a retrospective study
publisher BMC
series Journal of Biomedical Science
issn 1423-0127
publishDate 2019-10-01
description Abstract Background Most of the circulating Vitamin D (VitD) is transported bound to vitamin D-binding protein (DBP), and several DBP single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) have been related to circulating VitD concentration and disease. In this study, we evaluated the association among DBP SNPs and AIDS progression in antiretroviral treatment (ART)-naïve-HIV-infected patients. Methods We performed a retrospective study in 667 patients who were classified according to their pattern of AIDS progression (183 long-term non-progressors (LTNPs), 334 moderate progressors (MPs), and 150 rapid progressors (RPs)) and 113 healthy blood donors (HIV, HCV, and HBV negative subjects). We genotyped seven DBP SNPs (rs16846876, rs12512631, rs2070741, rs2282679, rs7041, rs1155563, rs2298849) using Agena Bioscience’s MassARRAY platform. The genetic association was evaluated by Generalized Linear Models adjusted by age at the moment of HIV diagnosis, gender, risk group, and VDR rs2228570 SNP. Multiple testing correction was performed by the false discovery rate (Benjamini and Hochberg procedure; q-value). Results All SNPs were in HWE (p > 0.05) and had similar genotypic frequencies for DBP SNPs in healthy-controls and HIV-infected patients. In unadjusted GLMs, we only found significant association with AIDS progression in rs16846876 and rs12512631 SNPs. In adjusted GLMs, DBP rs16846876 SNP showed significant association under the recessive inheritance model [LTNPs vs. RPs (adjusted odds ratio (aOR) = 3.53; q-value = 0.044) and LTNPs vs. MPs (aOR = 3.28; q-value = 0.030)] and codominant [LTNPs vs. RPs (aOR = 4.92; q-value = 0.030) and LTNPs vs. MPs (aOR = 3.15; q-value = 0.030)]. Also, we found DBP rs12512631 SNP showed significant association in the inheritance model dominant [LTNPs vs. RPs (aOR = 0.49; q-value = 0.031) and LTNPs vs. MPs (aOR = 0.6; q-value = 0.047)], additive [LTNPs vs. RPs (aOR = 0.61; q-value = 0.031)], overdominant [LTNPs vs. MPs (aOR = 0.55; q-value = 0.032)], and codominant [LTNPs vs. RPs (aOR = 0.52; q-value = 0.036) and LTNPs vs. MPs (aOR = 0.55; q-value = 0.032)]. Additionally, we found a significant association between DBP haplotypes (composed by rs16846876 and rs12512631) and AIDS progression (LTNPs vs RPs): DBP haplotype AC (aOR = 0.63; q-value = 0.028) and the DBP haplotype TT (aOR = 1.64; q-value = 0.028). Conclusions DBP rs16846876 and rs12512631 SNPs are related to the patterns of clinical AIDS progression (LTNP, MP, and RP) in ART-naïve HIV-infected patients. Our findings provide new knowledge about AIDS progression that may be relevant to understanding the pathogenesis of HIV infection.
topic Single nucleotide polymorphisms
DBP
LTNPs
AIDS
Non-progression
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12929-019-0577-y
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spelling doaj-31a95a1823734e51839a8407771596ec2020-11-25T03:33:34ZengBMCJournal of Biomedical Science1423-01272019-10-0126111110.1186/s12929-019-0577-yDBP rs16846876 and rs12512631 polymorphisms are associated with progression to AIDS naïve HIV-infected patients: a retrospective studyMaría Ángeles JIMÉNEZ-SOUSA0José Luis JIMÉNEZ1Amanda FERNÁNDEZ-RODRÍGUEZ2José María BELLÓN3Carmen RODRÍGUEZ4Melchor RIERA5Joaquín PORTILLA6Ángeles CASTRO7María Ángeles MUÑOZ-FERNÁNDEZ8Salvador RESINO9Unidad de Infección Viral e Inmunidad, Centro Nacional de Microbiología, Instituto de Salud Carlos IIIPlataforma de Laboratorio, Hospital General Universitario “Gregorio Marañón”Unidad de Infección Viral e Inmunidad, Centro Nacional de Microbiología, Instituto de Salud Carlos IIIFundación para la Investigación Biomédica, Hospital General Universitario Gregorio Marañón, Instituto de Investigación Sanitaria Gregorio Marañón (IiSGM)Centro Sanitario Sandoval, Instituto de Investigación Sanitaria San Carlos (IdISSC)Servicio de Medicina Interna-Infecciosas, Hospital Universitario “Son Espases”Servicio de Enfermedades Infecciosas, Hospital General Universitario de AlicanteUnidad de Enfermedades Infecciosas, Servicio de Medicina Interna, Complejo Hospitalario Universitario a Coruña (CHUAC)Sección Inmunología, Laboratorio InmunoBiología Molecular, Hospital General Universitario Gregorio Marañón, IiSGM, and Spanish HIV HGM BioBankUnidad de Infección Viral e Inmunidad, Centro Nacional de Microbiología, Instituto de Salud Carlos IIIAbstract Background Most of the circulating Vitamin D (VitD) is transported bound to vitamin D-binding protein (DBP), and several DBP single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) have been related to circulating VitD concentration and disease. In this study, we evaluated the association among DBP SNPs and AIDS progression in antiretroviral treatment (ART)-naïve-HIV-infected patients. Methods We performed a retrospective study in 667 patients who were classified according to their pattern of AIDS progression (183 long-term non-progressors (LTNPs), 334 moderate progressors (MPs), and 150 rapid progressors (RPs)) and 113 healthy blood donors (HIV, HCV, and HBV negative subjects). We genotyped seven DBP SNPs (rs16846876, rs12512631, rs2070741, rs2282679, rs7041, rs1155563, rs2298849) using Agena Bioscience’s MassARRAY platform. The genetic association was evaluated by Generalized Linear Models adjusted by age at the moment of HIV diagnosis, gender, risk group, and VDR rs2228570 SNP. Multiple testing correction was performed by the false discovery rate (Benjamini and Hochberg procedure; q-value). Results All SNPs were in HWE (p > 0.05) and had similar genotypic frequencies for DBP SNPs in healthy-controls and HIV-infected patients. In unadjusted GLMs, we only found significant association with AIDS progression in rs16846876 and rs12512631 SNPs. In adjusted GLMs, DBP rs16846876 SNP showed significant association under the recessive inheritance model [LTNPs vs. RPs (adjusted odds ratio (aOR) = 3.53; q-value = 0.044) and LTNPs vs. MPs (aOR = 3.28; q-value = 0.030)] and codominant [LTNPs vs. RPs (aOR = 4.92; q-value = 0.030) and LTNPs vs. MPs (aOR = 3.15; q-value = 0.030)]. Also, we found DBP rs12512631 SNP showed significant association in the inheritance model dominant [LTNPs vs. RPs (aOR = 0.49; q-value = 0.031) and LTNPs vs. MPs (aOR = 0.6; q-value = 0.047)], additive [LTNPs vs. RPs (aOR = 0.61; q-value = 0.031)], overdominant [LTNPs vs. MPs (aOR = 0.55; q-value = 0.032)], and codominant [LTNPs vs. RPs (aOR = 0.52; q-value = 0.036) and LTNPs vs. MPs (aOR = 0.55; q-value = 0.032)]. Additionally, we found a significant association between DBP haplotypes (composed by rs16846876 and rs12512631) and AIDS progression (LTNPs vs RPs): DBP haplotype AC (aOR = 0.63; q-value = 0.028) and the DBP haplotype TT (aOR = 1.64; q-value = 0.028). Conclusions DBP rs16846876 and rs12512631 SNPs are related to the patterns of clinical AIDS progression (LTNP, MP, and RP) in ART-naïve HIV-infected patients. Our findings provide new knowledge about AIDS progression that may be relevant to understanding the pathogenesis of HIV infection.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12929-019-0577-ySingle nucleotide polymorphismsDBPLTNPsAIDSNon-progression