Class II cytokine receptor gene cluster is a major locus for hepatitis B persistence.
Angela J AJ Frodsham,
Lyna L Zhang,
Uga U Dumpis,
Nor Azizah Mohd NA Taib,
Steve S Best,
Andrew A Durham,
Branwen J W BJ Hennig,
Simon S Hellier,
Susanne S Knapp,
Mark M Wright,
Maria M Chiaramonte,
John I JI Bell,
Mary M Graves,
Hilton C HC Whittle,
Howard C HC Thomas,
Mark R MR Thursz and
Adrian V S AV Hill
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 103(24):9148-53 (2006)
PMID 16757563
PMCID:
1482581
Persistent hepatitis B virus infection is a major risk factor for hepatocellular carcinoma, the most frequent cancer in some developing countries. Up to 95% of those infected at birth and 15% of those infected after the neonatal period fail to clear hepatitis B virus, together resulting in approximately 350 million persistent carriers worldwide. Via a whole genome scan in Gambian families, we have identified a major susceptibility locus as a cluster of class II cytokine receptor genes on chromosome 21q22. Coding changes in two of these genes, the type I IFN receptor gene, IFN-AR2, and the IL-10RB gene that encodes a receptor chain for IL-10-related cytokines including the IFN-lambdas, are associated with viral clearance (haplotype P value = 0.0003), and in vitro assays support functional roles for these variants in receptor signaling.
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0602800103
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