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Association of Toll-Like Receptor Gene Polymorphisms with Tuberculosis in HIV-Positive Participants.


ABSTRACT: Genetic factors in the HIV-background may play a significant role in the susceptibility to secondary diseases, like tuberculosis, which is the leading cause in mortality of HIV-positive people. Toll-like receptors (TLRs) are considered to be receptors for adaptive immunity, and polymorphisms in TLR genes can influence the activity of the immune response to infection. We conducted a case-control study of the association of TLR gene polymorphisms with the risk of tuberculosis coinfection in a multi-country sample of HIV-positive participants. Our study revealed certain associations between TLR4 and TLR6 polymorphisms and HIV-tuberculosis coinfection. We also found that the analyzed TLR1 and TLR4 polymorphisms were linked with the decline in CD4+ cell count, which is a predictor of disease progression in HIV-infected individuals. Our findings confirm that TLR gene polymorphisms are factors that may contribute to development of HIV-tuberculosis coinfection. However, the essence of the observed associations remains unclear, since it can also include both environmental factors and epigenetic mechanisms of gene expression regulation.

SUBMITTER: Salamaikina S 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC10443360 | biostudies-literature | 2023 Jul

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Association of Toll-Like Receptor Gene Polymorphisms with Tuberculosis in HIV-Positive Participants.

Salamaikina Svetlana S   Korchagin Vitaly V   Kulabukhova Ekaterina E   Mironov Konstantin K   Zimina Vera V   Kravtchenko Alexey A   Akimkin Vasily V  

Epigenomes 20230725 3


Genetic factors in the HIV-background may play a significant role in the susceptibility to secondary diseases, like tuberculosis, which is the leading cause in mortality of HIV-positive people. Toll-like receptors (TLRs) are considered to be receptors for adaptive immunity, and polymorphisms in TLR genes can influence the activity of the immune response to infection. We conducted a case-control study of the association of TLR gene polymorphisms with the risk of tuberculosis coinfection in a mult  ...[more]

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