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A Mal functional variant is associated with protection against invasive pneumococcal disease, bacteremia, malaria and tuberculosis
Authors:Khor Chiea C  Chapman Stephen J  Vannberg Fredrik O  Dunne Aisling  Murphy Caroline  Ling Edmund Y  Frodsham Angela J  Walley Andrew J  Kyrieleis Otto  Khan Amir  Aucan Christophe  Segal Shelley  Moore Catrin E  Knox Kyle  Campbell Sarah J  Lienhardt Christian  Scott Anthony  Aaby Peter  Sow Oumou Y  Grignani Robert T  Sillah Jackson  Sirugo Giorgio  Peshu Nobert  Williams Thomas N  Maitland Kathryn  Davies Robert J O  Kwiatkowski Dominic P  Day Nicholas P  Yala Djamel  Crook Derrick W  Marsh Kevin  Berkley James A  O'Neill Luke A J  Hill Adrian V S
Affiliation:The Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics, University of Oxford, UK.
Abstract:Toll-like receptors (TLRs) and members of their signaling pathway are important in the initiation of the innate immune response to a wide variety of pathogens. The adaptor protein Mal (also known as TIRAP), encoded by TIRAP (MIM 606252), mediates downstream signaling of TLR2 and TLR4 (refs. 4-6). We report a case-control study of 6,106 individuals from the UK, Vietnam and several African countries with invasive pneumococcal disease, bacteremia, malaria and tuberculosis. We genotyped 33 SNPs, including rs8177374, which encodes a leucine substitution at Ser180 of Mal. We found that heterozygous carriage of this variant associated independently with all four infectious diseases in the different study populations. Combining the study groups, we found substantial support for a protective effect of S180L heterozygosity against these infectious diseases (N = 6,106; overall P = 9.6 x 10(-8)). We found that the Mal S180L variant attenuated TLR2 signal transduction.
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