Inter-individual variation in health and disease associated with pulmonary infectious agents.

Kirsten C Verhein, Heather L Vellers, Steven R Kleeberger
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Abstract

Respiratory infectious diseases resulting from bacterial or viral pathogens such as Mycobacterium tuberculosis, Streptococcus pneumoniae, respiratory syncytial virus (RSV), or influenza, are major global public health concerns. Lower respiratory tract infections are leading causes of morbidity and mortality, only behind ischemic heart disease and stroke (GBD 2015 LRI Collaborators in Lancet Infect Dis 17(11):1133-1161, 2017). Developing countries are particularly impacted by these diseases. However, while many are infected with viruses such as RSV (> 90% of all individuals are infected by age 2), only sub-populations develop severe disease. Many factors may contribute to the inter-individual variation in response to respiratory infections, including gender, age, socioeconomic status, nutrition, and genetic background. Association studies with functional single nucleotide polymorphisms in biologically plausible gene candidates have been performed in human populations to provide insight to the molecular genetic contribution to pulmonary infections and disease severity. In vitro cell models and genome-wide association studies in animal models of genetic susceptibility to respiratory infections have also identified novel candidate susceptibility genes, some of which have also been found to contribute to disease susceptibility in human populations. Genetic background may also contribute to differential efficacy of vaccines against respiratory infections. Development of new genetic mouse models such as the collaborative cross and diversity outbred mice should provide additional insight to the mechanisms of genetic susceptibility to respiratory infections. Continued investigation of susceptibility factors should provide insight to novel strategies to prevent and treat disease that contributes to global morbidity and mortality attributed to respiratory infections.

Abstract Image

与肺部感染因子相关的健康和疾病的个体间差异。
由细菌或病毒病原体引起的呼吸道传染病,如结核分枝杆菌、肺炎链球菌、呼吸道合胞病毒(RSV)或流感,是全球主要的公共卫生问题。下呼吸道感染是发病率和死亡率的主要原因,仅次于缺血性心脏病和中风(GBD 2015 LRI合作者在柳叶刀感染疾病17(11):1133-1161,2017)。发展中国家尤其受到这些疾病的影响。然而,虽然许多人感染了RSV等病毒(到2岁时,90%的人感染RSV),但只有一小部分人会患上严重疾病。许多因素可能导致个体对呼吸道感染反应的差异,包括性别、年龄、社会经济地位、营养和遗传背景。在人类群体中进行了与生物学上合理的候选基因的功能单核苷酸多态性的关联研究,以提供对肺部感染和疾病严重程度的分子遗传贡献的见解。体外细胞模型和呼吸道感染遗传易感性动物模型的全基因组关联研究也确定了新的候选易感基因,其中一些也被发现有助于人类群体的疾病易感性。遗传背景也可能导致疫苗对呼吸道感染的不同疗效。开发新的遗传小鼠模型,如合作杂交和多样性远交种小鼠,将为呼吸道感染的遗传易感性机制提供更多的见解。对易感因素的持续研究将为预防和治疗导致全球呼吸道感染发病率和死亡率的疾病的新策略提供见解。
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