TY - JOUR KW - Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome KW - Animals KW - Communicable Diseases KW - Genetic Linkage KW - Genetic Predisposition to Disease KW - Genome, Human KW - Hepatitis B, Chronic KW - Humans KW - leprosy KW - Malaria KW - Mice KW - Signal Transduction KW - Tuberculosis AU - Hill A AB -

Host genetic factors play a major role in determining differential susceptibility to major infectious diseases of humans, such as malaria, HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, and invasive pneumococcal disease. Progress in identifying the relevant genetic loci has come from a variety of approaches. Most convincing associations have been identified by case-control studies assessing biologically plausible candidate genes. All six of the genes that have a major effect on infectious disease susceptibility in humans have been identified in this way. However, recently genome-wide linkage analysis of affected sibling pairs has identified susceptibility loci for chronic infections such as leprosy and chronic hepatitis B virus persistence. Other approaches used successfully have included assessment in humans of the homologues of susceptibility genes mapped and identified in murine models. However, the great majority of susceptibility loci remain to be identified and the advent of large-scale genome-wide association scans offers a new approach to defining many of these.

BT - Annual review of genetics C1 - http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17094741?dopt=Abstract DA - 2006 DO - 10.1146/annurev.genet.40.110405.090546 J2 - Annu. Rev. Genet. LA - eng N2 -

Host genetic factors play a major role in determining differential susceptibility to major infectious diseases of humans, such as malaria, HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis, and invasive pneumococcal disease. Progress in identifying the relevant genetic loci has come from a variety of approaches. Most convincing associations have been identified by case-control studies assessing biologically plausible candidate genes. All six of the genes that have a major effect on infectious disease susceptibility in humans have been identified in this way. However, recently genome-wide linkage analysis of affected sibling pairs has identified susceptibility loci for chronic infections such as leprosy and chronic hepatitis B virus persistence. Other approaches used successfully have included assessment in humans of the homologues of susceptibility genes mapped and identified in murine models. However, the great majority of susceptibility loci remain to be identified and the advent of large-scale genome-wide association scans offers a new approach to defining many of these.

PY - 2006 SP - 469 EP - 86 T2 - Annual review of genetics TI - Aspects of genetic susceptibility to human infectious diseases. VL - 40 SN - 0066-4197 ER -