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

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-M...

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Autores principales: Ruiz-Extremera, A., Pavón-Castillero, E. J., Florido, M., Muñoz de Rueda, P., Muñoz-Gámez, J. A., Casado, J., Carazo, A., Quiles, R., Jiménez-Ruiz, S. M., Gila, A., Luna, J. D., León, J., Salmerón, J.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5321427/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28225833
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0172527
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author Ruiz-Extremera, A.
Pavón-Castillero, E. J.
Florido, M.
Muñoz de Rueda, P.
Muñoz-Gámez, J. A.
Casado, J.
Carazo, A.
Quiles, R.
Jiménez-Ruiz, S. M.
Gila, A.
Luna, J. D.
León, J.
Salmerón, J.
author_facet Ruiz-Extremera, A.
Pavón-Castillero, E. J.
Florido, M.
Muñoz de Rueda, P.
Muñoz-Gámez, J. A.
Casado, J.
Carazo, A.
Quiles, R.
Jiménez-Ruiz, S. M.
Gila, A.
Luna, J. D.
León, J.
Salmerón, J.
author_sort Ruiz-Extremera, A.
collection PubMed
description 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.
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spelling pubmed-53214272017-03-09 Influence of HLA class I, HLA class II and KIRs on vertical transmission and chronicity of hepatitis C virus in children Ruiz-Extremera, A. Pavón-Castillero, E. J. Florido, M. Muñoz de Rueda, P. Muñoz-Gámez, J. A. Casado, J. Carazo, A. Quiles, R. Jiménez-Ruiz, S. M. Gila, A. Luna, J. D. León, J. Salmerón, J. PLoS One Research Article 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. Public Library of Science 2017-02-22 /pmc/articles/PMC5321427/ /pubmed/28225833 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0172527 Text en © 2017 Ruiz-Extremera et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Ruiz-Extremera, A.
Pavón-Castillero, E. J.
Florido, M.
Muñoz de Rueda, P.
Muñoz-Gámez, J. A.
Casado, J.
Carazo, A.
Quiles, R.
Jiménez-Ruiz, S. M.
Gila, A.
Luna, J. D.
León, J.
Salmerón, J.
Influence of HLA class I, HLA class II and KIRs on vertical transmission and chronicity of hepatitis C virus in children
title Influence of HLA class I, HLA class II and KIRs on vertical transmission and chronicity of hepatitis C virus in children
title_full Influence of HLA class I, HLA class II and KIRs on vertical transmission and chronicity of hepatitis C virus in children
title_fullStr Influence of HLA class I, HLA class II and KIRs on vertical transmission and chronicity of hepatitis C virus in children
title_full_unstemmed Influence of HLA class I, HLA class II and KIRs on vertical transmission and chronicity of hepatitis C virus in children
title_short Influence of HLA class I, HLA class II and KIRs on vertical transmission and chronicity of hepatitis C virus in children
title_sort influence of hla class i, hla class ii and kirs on vertical transmission and chronicity of hepatitis c virus in children
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5321427/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28225833
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0172527
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