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Association of HLA class I with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection

BACKGROUND: The human leukocyte antigen (HLA) system is widely used as a strategy in the search for the etiology of infectious diseases and autoimmune disorders. During the Taiwan epidemic of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS), many health care workers were infected. In an effort to establish...

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Autores principales: Lin, Marie, Tseng, Hsiang-Kuang, Trejaut, Jean A, Lee, Hui-Lin, Loo, Jun-Hun, Chu, Chen-Chung, Chen, Pei-Jan, Su, Ying-Wen, Lim, Ken Hong, Tsai, Zen-Uong, Lin, Ruey-Yi, Lin, Ruey-Shiung, Huang, Chun-Hsiung
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2003
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC212558/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12969506
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2350-4-9
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author Lin, Marie
Tseng, Hsiang-Kuang
Trejaut, Jean A
Lee, Hui-Lin
Loo, Jun-Hun
Chu, Chen-Chung
Chen, Pei-Jan
Su, Ying-Wen
Lim, Ken Hong
Tsai, Zen-Uong
Lin, Ruey-Yi
Lin, Ruey-Shiung
Huang, Chun-Hsiung
author_facet Lin, Marie
Tseng, Hsiang-Kuang
Trejaut, Jean A
Lee, Hui-Lin
Loo, Jun-Hun
Chu, Chen-Chung
Chen, Pei-Jan
Su, Ying-Wen
Lim, Ken Hong
Tsai, Zen-Uong
Lin, Ruey-Yi
Lin, Ruey-Shiung
Huang, Chun-Hsiung
author_sort Lin, Marie
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The human leukocyte antigen (HLA) system is widely used as a strategy in the search for the etiology of infectious diseases and autoimmune disorders. During the Taiwan epidemic of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS), many health care workers were infected. In an effort to establish a screening program for high risk personal, the distribution of HLA class I and II alleles in case and control groups was examined for the presence of an association to a genetic susceptibly or resistance to SARS coronavirus infection. METHODS: HLA-class I and II allele typing by PCR-SSOP was performed on 37 cases of probable SARS, 28 fever patients excluded later as probable SARS, and 101 non-infected health care workers who were exposed or possibly exposed to SARS coronavirus. An additional control set of 190 normal healthy unrelated Taiwanese was also used in the analysis. RESULTS: Woolf and Haldane Odds ratio (OR) and corrected P-value (Pc) obtained from two tails Fisher exact test were used to show susceptibility of HLA class I or class II alleles with coronavirus infection. At first, when analyzing infected SARS patients and high risk health care workers groups, HLA-B*4601 (OR = 2.08, P = 0.04, Pc = n.s.) and HLA-B*5401 (OR = 5.44, P = 0.02, Pc = n.s.) appeared as the most probable elements that may be favoring SARS coronavirus infection. After selecting only a "severe cases" patient group from the infected "probable SARS" patient group and comparing them with the high risk health care workers group, the severity of SARS was shown to be significantly associated with HLA-B*4601 (P = 0.0008 or Pc = 0.0279). CONCLUSIONS: Densely populated regions with genetically related southern Asian populations appear to be more affected by the spreading of SARS infection. Up until recently, no probable SARS patients were reported among Taiwan indigenous peoples who are genetically distinct from the Taiwanese general population, have no HLA-B* 4601 and have high frequency of HLA-B* 1301. While increase of HLA-B* 4601 allele frequency was observed in the "Probable SARS infected" patient group, a further significant increase of the allele was seen in the "Severe cases" patient group. These results appeared to indicate association of HLA-B* 4601 with the severity of SARS infection in Asian populations. Independent studies are needed to test these results.
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spelling pubmed-2125582003-10-11 Association of HLA class I with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection Lin, Marie Tseng, Hsiang-Kuang Trejaut, Jean A Lee, Hui-Lin Loo, Jun-Hun Chu, Chen-Chung Chen, Pei-Jan Su, Ying-Wen Lim, Ken Hong Tsai, Zen-Uong Lin, Ruey-Yi Lin, Ruey-Shiung Huang, Chun-Hsiung BMC Med Genet Case Report BACKGROUND: The human leukocyte antigen (HLA) system is widely used as a strategy in the search for the etiology of infectious diseases and autoimmune disorders. During the Taiwan epidemic of severe acute respiratory syndrome (SARS), many health care workers were infected. In an effort to establish a screening program for high risk personal, the distribution of HLA class I and II alleles in case and control groups was examined for the presence of an association to a genetic susceptibly or resistance to SARS coronavirus infection. METHODS: HLA-class I and II allele typing by PCR-SSOP was performed on 37 cases of probable SARS, 28 fever patients excluded later as probable SARS, and 101 non-infected health care workers who were exposed or possibly exposed to SARS coronavirus. An additional control set of 190 normal healthy unrelated Taiwanese was also used in the analysis. RESULTS: Woolf and Haldane Odds ratio (OR) and corrected P-value (Pc) obtained from two tails Fisher exact test were used to show susceptibility of HLA class I or class II alleles with coronavirus infection. At first, when analyzing infected SARS patients and high risk health care workers groups, HLA-B*4601 (OR = 2.08, P = 0.04, Pc = n.s.) and HLA-B*5401 (OR = 5.44, P = 0.02, Pc = n.s.) appeared as the most probable elements that may be favoring SARS coronavirus infection. After selecting only a "severe cases" patient group from the infected "probable SARS" patient group and comparing them with the high risk health care workers group, the severity of SARS was shown to be significantly associated with HLA-B*4601 (P = 0.0008 or Pc = 0.0279). CONCLUSIONS: Densely populated regions with genetically related southern Asian populations appear to be more affected by the spreading of SARS infection. Up until recently, no probable SARS patients were reported among Taiwan indigenous peoples who are genetically distinct from the Taiwanese general population, have no HLA-B* 4601 and have high frequency of HLA-B* 1301. While increase of HLA-B* 4601 allele frequency was observed in the "Probable SARS infected" patient group, a further significant increase of the allele was seen in the "Severe cases" patient group. These results appeared to indicate association of HLA-B* 4601 with the severity of SARS infection in Asian populations. Independent studies are needed to test these results. BioMed Central 2003-09-12 /pmc/articles/PMC212558/ /pubmed/12969506 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2350-4-9 Text en Copyright © 2003 Lin et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article: verbatim copying and redistribution of this article are permitted in all media for any purpose, provided this notice is preserved along with the article's original URL.
spellingShingle Case Report
Lin, Marie
Tseng, Hsiang-Kuang
Trejaut, Jean A
Lee, Hui-Lin
Loo, Jun-Hun
Chu, Chen-Chung
Chen, Pei-Jan
Su, Ying-Wen
Lim, Ken Hong
Tsai, Zen-Uong
Lin, Ruey-Yi
Lin, Ruey-Shiung
Huang, Chun-Hsiung
Association of HLA class I with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection
title Association of HLA class I with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection
title_full Association of HLA class I with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection
title_fullStr Association of HLA class I with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection
title_full_unstemmed Association of HLA class I with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection
title_short Association of HLA class I with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection
title_sort association of hla class i with severe acute respiratory syndrome coronavirus infection
topic Case Report
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC212558/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12969506
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2350-4-9
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