TLR9 polymorphisms in African populations: no association with severe malaria, but evidence of cis-variants acting on gene expression

非洲人群中的 TLR9 多态性:与严重疟疾无关,但有证据表明顺式变异会影响基因表达

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作者:Susana Campino, Julian Forton, Sarah Auburn, Andrew Fry, Mahamadou Diakite, Anna Richardson, Jeremy Hull, Muminatou Jallow, Fatou Sisay-Joof, Margaret Pinder, Malcolm E Molyneux, Terrie E Taylor, Kirk Rockett, Taane G Clark, Dominic P Kwiatkowski

Background

During malaria infection the Toll-like receptor 9 (TLR9) is activated through induction with plasmodium DNA or another malaria motif not yet identified. Although TLR9 activation by malaria parasites is well reported, the implication to the susceptibility to severe malaria is not clear. The

Conclusion

By using the largest cohorts analysed to date, as well as a standardized phenotype definition and study design, no association of TLR9 genetic variants with severe malaria was found. This analysis considered all common variants in the region, but it is remains possible that there are rare variants with association signals. This report also shows that TLR9 expression is potentially modulated through cis-regulatory variants, which may lead to differential inflammatory responses to infection between individuals.

Methods

This study explores the contribution of TLR9 genetic variants to severe malaria using two approaches. First, an association study of four common single nucleotide polymorphisms was performed on both family- and population-based studies from Malawian and Gambian populations (n>6000 individual). Subsequently, it was assessed whether TLR9 expression is affected by cis-acting variants and if these variants could be mapped. For this work, an allele specific expression (ASE) assay on a panel of HapMap cell lines was carried out.

Results

No convincing association was found with polymorphisms in TLR9 for malaria severity, in either Gambian or Malawian populations, using both case-control and family based study designs. Using an allele specific expression assay it was observed that TLR9 expression is affected by cis-acting variants, these results were replicated in a second experiment using biological replicates.

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