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Medicine and Health Sciences Commons

Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®

Nova Southeastern University

2011

Immunology and Infectious Disease

Articles 1 - 1 of 1

Full-Text Articles in Medicine and Health Sciences

Role Of Exonic Variation In Chemokine Receptor Genes On Aids: Ccrl2 F167y Association With Pneumocystis Pneumonia, Ping An, Rongling Li, Ji Ming Wang, Teizo Yoshimura, Munehisa Takahashi, Ram Samudralal, Stephen J. O'Brien, John Phair, James J. Goedert, Gregory D. Kirk, Jennifer L. Troyer, Efe Sezgin, Susan Buchbinder, Sharyne Donfield, George W. Nelson, Cheryl Winkler Oct 2011

Role Of Exonic Variation In Chemokine Receptor Genes On Aids: Ccrl2 F167y Association With Pneumocystis Pneumonia, Ping An, Rongling Li, Ji Ming Wang, Teizo Yoshimura, Munehisa Takahashi, Ram Samudralal, Stephen J. O'Brien, John Phair, James J. Goedert, Gregory D. Kirk, Jennifer L. Troyer, Efe Sezgin, Susan Buchbinder, Sharyne Donfield, George W. Nelson, Cheryl Winkler

Biology Faculty Articles

Chromosome 3p21–22 harbors two clusters of chemokine receptor genes, several of which serve as major or minor coreceptors of HIV-1. Although the genetic association of CCR5 andCCR2 variants with HIV-1 pathogenesis is well known, the role of variation in other nearby chemokine receptor genes remain unresolved. We genotyped exonic single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in chemokine receptor genes: CCR3, CCRL2, and CXCR6 (at 3p21) and CCR8 and CX3CR1 (at 3p22), the majority of which were non-synonymous. The individual SNPs were tested for their effects on disease progression and outcomes in five treatment-naïve HIV-1/AIDS natural history cohorts. In …