combine@alvar.ug

Methylome-wide analysis reveals epigenetic marks associated with resistance to tuberculosis in HIV-infected individuals from East Africa

Methylome-wide analysis reveals epigenetic marks associated with resistance to tuberculosis in HIV-infected individuals from East Africa

Show simple record

dc.contributor.author Catherine M. Stein
dc.contributor.author Penelope Bencheck
dc.contributor.author Jacquelaine Bartlett
dc.contributor.author Robert P. Igo
dc.contributor.author Rafal S. Sobota
dc.contributor.author Keith Chervenak
dc.contributor.author Harriet Mayanja-Kizza
dc.contributor.author C. Fordham von Reyn
dc.contributor.author Timothy Lahey
dc.contributor.author William S. Bush
dc.contributor.author W. Henry Boom
dc.contributor.author William K. Scott
dc.contributor.author Carmen J. Marsit
dc.contributor.author Giorgio Sirugo
dc.contributor.author Scott M. Williams
dc.date.accessioned 2021-01-11T13:51:56Z
dc.date.available 2021-01-11T13:51:56Z
dc.date.issued 2020
dc.identifier.uri https://combine.alvar.ug/handle/1/49731
dc.description.abstract Background: Tuberculosis (TB) is the most deadly infectious disease globally and highly prevalent in the developing world, especially sub-Saharan Africa. Even though a third of humans are exposed to Myocbacterium tuberculosis (Mtb), most infected immunocompetent individuals do not develop active TB. In contrast, for individuals infected with both TB and the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), the risk of active disease is 10% or more per year. Previously, we identified in a genome-wide association study a region on chromosome 5 that was associated with resistance to TB. This region included epigenetic marks that could influence gene regulation so we hypothesized that HIV-infected individuals exposed to Mtb, who remain disease free, carry epigenetic changes that strongly protect them from active TB. To test this hypothesis, we conducted a methylome-wide study in HIV-infected, TB-exposed cohorts from Uganda and Tanzania.; Results: In 221 HIV-infected adults from Uganda and Tanzania, we identified 3 regions of interest that included markers that were differentially methylated between TB cases and LTBI controls, that also included methylation QTLs and associated SNPs: chromosome 1 (RNF220, p=4x10-5), chromosome 2 (between COPS8 and COL6A3 genes, p=2.7x10-5), and chromosome 5 (CEP72, p=1.3x10-5). These methylation results colocalized with associated SNPs, methylation QTLs, and methylation x SNP interaction effects. These markers were in regions with regulatory markers for cells involved in TB immunity and/or lung. ; Conclusion: Epigenetic regulation is a potential biologic factor underlying resistance to TB in immunocompromised individuals that can act in conjunction with genetic variants.
dc.publisher Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
dc.title Methylome-wide analysis reveals epigenetic marks associated with resistance to tuberculosis in HIV-infected individuals from East Africa
dc.type Preprint
dc.identifier.doi 10.1101/2020.07.14.20153395
dc.identifier.mag 3043745956
dc.identifier.lens 115-947-826-880-182
dc.subject.lens-fields SNP
dc.subject.lens-fields Single-nucleotide polymorphism
dc.subject.lens-fields Regulation of gene expression
dc.subject.lens-fields DNA methylation
dc.subject.lens-fields Immunology
dc.subject.lens-fields Tuberculosis
dc.subject.lens-fields Methylation
dc.subject.lens-fields Epigenetics
dc.subject.lens-fields Infectious disease (medical specialty)
dc.subject.lens-fields Biology


This record appears in the collections of the following institution(s)

Show simple record

Search Entire Database


Browse

My Account