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The risk of disease associated with persistent virus infections such as HIV-I, hepatitis B and C, and human T-lymphotropic virus-I (HTLV-I) is strongly determined by the virus load. However, it is not known whether a persistent class I HLA-restricted antiviral cytotoxic T lymphocyte (CTL) response reduces viral load and is therefore beneficial or causes tissue damage and contributes to disease pathogenesis. HTLV-I-associated myelopathy (HAM/TSP) patients have a high virus load compared with asymptomatic HTLV-I carriers. We hypothesized that HLA alleles control HTLV-I provirus load and thus influence susceptibility to HAM/TSP. Here we show that, after infection with HTLV-I, the class I allele HLA-A*02 halves the odds of HAM/TSP (P < 0.0001), preventing 28% of potential cases of HAM/TSP. Furthermore, HLA-A*02(+) healthy HTLV-I carriers have a proviral load one-third that (P = 0.014) of HLA-A*02(-) HTLV-I carriers. An association of HLA-DRB1*0101 with disease susceptibility also was identified, which doubled the odds of HAM/TSP in the absence of the protective effect of HLA-A*02. These data have implications for other persistent virus infections in which virus load is associated with prognosis and imply that an efficient antiviral CTL response can reduce virus load and so prevent disease in persistent virus infections.

Original publication

DOI

10.1073/pnas.96.7.3848

Type

Conference paper

Publication Date

30/03/1999

Volume

96

Pages

3848 - 3853

Keywords

Alleles, Genes, MHC Class I, Genes, MHC Class II, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, HLA-A Antigens, HLA-B Antigens, HLA-DR Antigens, HLA-DRB1 Chains, HTLV-I Infections, Histocompatibility Testing, Human T-lymphotropic virus 1, Humans, Paraparesis, Tropical Spastic, Risk Factors, Viral Load