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  4. HLA Heterozygote Advantage against HIV-1 Is Driven by Quantitative and Qualitative Differences in HLA Allele-Specific Peptide Presentation
 
research article

HLA Heterozygote Advantage against HIV-1 Is Driven by Quantitative and Qualitative Differences in HLA Allele-Specific Peptide Presentation

Arora, Jatin
•
Pierini, Federica
•
McLaren, Paul J.
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March 1, 2020
Molecular Biology And Evolution

Pathogen-mediated balancing selection is regarded as a key driver of host immunogenetic diversity. A hallmark for balancing selection in humans is the heterozygote advantage at genes of the human leukocyte antigen (HLA), resulting in improved HIV-1 control. However, the actual mechanism of the observed heterozygote advantage is still elusive. HLA heterozygotes may present a broader array of antigenic viral peptides to immune cells, possibly resulting in a more efficient cytotoxic T-cell response. Alternatively, heterozygosity may simply increase the chance to carry the most protective HLA alleles, as individual HLA alleles are known to differ substantially in their association with HIV-1 control. Here, we used data from 6,311 HIV-1-infected individuals to explore the relative contribution of quantitative and qualitative aspects of peptide presentation in HLA heterozygote advantage against HIV. Screening the entire HIV-1 proteome, we observed that heterozygous individuals exhibited a broader array of HIV-1 peptides presented by their HLA class I alleles. In addition, viral load was negatively correlated with the breadth of the HIV-1 peptide repertoire bound by an individuals HLA variants, particularly at HLA-B. This suggests that heterozygote advantage at HLA-B is at least in part mediated by quantitative peptide presentation. We also observed higher HIV-1 sequence diversity among HLA-B heterozygous individuals, suggesting stronger evolutionary pressure from HLA heterozygosity. However, HLA heterozygotes were also more likely to carry certain HLA alleles, including the highly protective HLA-B*57:01 variant, indicating that HLA heterozygote advantage ultimately results from a combination of quantitative and qualitative effects in antigen presentation.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1093/molbev/msz249
Web of Science ID

WOS:000522244100003

Author(s)
Arora, Jatin
Pierini, Federica
McLaren, Paul J.
Carrington, Mary
Fellay, Jacques  
Lenz, Tobias L.
Date Issued

2020-03-01

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS

Published in
Molecular Biology And Evolution
Volume

37

Issue

3

Start page

639

End page

650

Subjects

Biochemistry & Molecular Biology

•

Evolutionary Biology

•

Genetics & Heredity

•

major histocompatibility complex

•

mhc evolution

•

pathogen-mediated balancing selection

•

divergent allele advantage

•

human leukocyte antigen

•

antigen presentation

•

multiple sequence alignment

•

mhc class-i

•

linkage disequilibrium

•

balancing selection

•

natural-selection

•

evolution

•

diversity

•

divergent

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
UPFELLAY  
Available on Infoscience
April 17, 2020
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/168231
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