4.5 Article

Genetic polymorphisms in host antiviral genes: Associations with humoral and cellular immunity to measles vaccine

Journal

VACCINE
Volume 29, Issue 48, Pages 8988-8997

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.vaccine.2011.09.043

Keywords

Single nucleotide polymorphisms; Haplotypes; Antiviral genes; Measles vaccine; Immunity

Funding

  1. National Institute Of Allergy And Infectious Diseases [AI33194, AI48793]
  2. National Center for Research Resources (NCRR), National Institutes of Health [5UL1RR024150-03]
  3. NIH Roadmap for Medical Research
  4. Merk Co.

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Host antiviral genes are important regulators of antiviral immunity and plausible genetic determinants of immune response heterogeneity after vaccination. We genotyped and analyzed 307 common candidate tagSNPs from 12 antiviral genes in a cohort of 745 schoolchildren immunized with two doses of measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine. Associations between SNPs/haplotypes and measles virus-specific immune outcomes were assessed using linear regression methodologies in Caucasians and African-Americans. Genetic variants within the DDX58/RIG-I gene, including a coding polymorphism (rs3205166/VaI800Val), were associated as single-SNPs (p <= 0.017; although these SNPs did not remain significant after correction for false discovery rate/FDR) and in haplotype-level analysis, with measles-specific antibody variations in Caucasians (haplotype allele p-value = 0.021; haplotype global p-value = 0.076). Four DDX58 polymorphisms, in high LD, demonstrated also associations (after correction for FDR) with variations in both measles-specific IFN-gamma and IL-2 secretion in Caucasians (p <= 0.001, q = 0.193). Two intronic OAS1 polymorphisms, including the functional OAS1 SNP rs10774671 (p = 0.003), demonstrated evidence of association with a significant allele-dose-related increase in neutralizing antibody levels in African-Americans. Genotype and haplotype-level associations demonstrated the role of ADAR genetic variants, including a non-synonymous SNP (rs2229857/Arg384Lys; p = 0.01), in regulating measles virus-specific IFN-gamma Elispot responses in Caucasians (haplotype global p-value = 0.017). After correction for FDR, 15 single-SNP associations (11 SNPs in Caucasians and 4 SNPs in African-Americans) still remained significant at the q-value < 0.20. In conclusion, our findings strongly point to genetic variants/genes, involved in antiviral sensing and antiviral control, as critical determinants, differentially modulating the adaptive immune responses to live attenuated measles vaccine in Caucasians and African-Americans. (C) 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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