Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6116743 | Human Immunology | 2013 | 5 Pages |
Abstract
Among the 348 children born to 266 HIV+ mothers, 258 were uninfected and 90 became infected perinatally. HLA-G exons 2 and 3 of 266 mothers and 251 children were sequenced and genotyped. Among 14 HLA-G alleles identified, only 4 alleles have a phenotype frequency above 10%. Correlation analysis showed that HLA-Gâ01:03+ mothers were less likely to perinatally transmit HIV-1 to their children (p = 0.038, Odds ratio:0.472, 95%CI:0.229-0.973). Mother-child HLA-G concordance was not associated with the increased perinatal HIV transmission. There was no significant difference in the general health between the transmitting mothers and the mothers who did not transmit HIV to their children.
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Authors
Ma Luo, Chris Czarnecki, Suzie Ramdahin, Joanne Embree, Francis A. Plummer,