Standard

Human Genetic Predisposition to Diseases Caused by Viruses from Flaviviridae Family. / Yudin, N. S.; Barkhash, A. V.; Maksimov, V. N. et al.

In: Molecular Biology, Vol. 52, No. 2, 01.03.2018, p. 165-181.

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

Harvard

Yudin, NS, Barkhash, AV, Maksimov, VN, Ignatieva, EV & Romaschenko, AG 2018, 'Human Genetic Predisposition to Diseases Caused by Viruses from Flaviviridae Family', Molecular Biology, vol. 52, no. 2, pp. 165-181. https://doi.org/10.1134/S0026893317050223

APA

Vancouver

Yudin NS, Barkhash AV, Maksimov VN, Ignatieva EV, Romaschenko AG. Human Genetic Predisposition to Diseases Caused by Viruses from Flaviviridae Family. Molecular Biology. 2018 Mar 1;52(2):165-181. doi: 10.1134/S0026893317050223

Author

Yudin, N. S. ; Barkhash, A. V. ; Maksimov, V. N. et al. / Human Genetic Predisposition to Diseases Caused by Viruses from Flaviviridae Family. In: Molecular Biology. 2018 ; Vol. 52, No. 2. pp. 165-181.

BibTeX

@article{5e81177b43e5408abf57576260312c60,
title = "Human Genetic Predisposition to Diseases Caused by Viruses from Flaviviridae Family",
abstract = "The identification of human predisposition genes to severe forms of infectious diseases is important for understanding the mechanisms of pathogenesis, as well as for the detection of the risk groups. This will allow one to carry out targeted vaccination and preventive therapy. The most common approaches to the genetic risk estimation include conducting association studies, in which the groups of patients and control individuals are compared using both preliminarily selected candidate genes and using genome-wide analysis. To search for genetic variants predisposed to severe forms of infectious diseases, it is expedient to form a control that consists of patients with clinically proven infections with asymptomatic or mild forms of the disease. The examples of the use of these approaches to identify genetic factors that predispose one to severe forms of infections caused by viruses from the Flaviviridae family are considered in the review. At present, a number of genetic markers associated with predisposition to tick-borne encephalitis, West Nile fever, and Dengue fever have already been detected. These associations must be confirmed in independent samples. Genetic variants, for which the association with spontaneous recovery during infection with hepatitis C virus, patient{\textquoteright}s reaction on antiviral drugs, and the development of liver fibrosis was established, were also detected. The gene variants with more pronounced phenotypic effects will probably be found during further studies; they can be used in clinical practice as prognostic markers of the course and outcomes of infection with the Flaviviridae, as well as of the response to treatment.",
keywords = "candidate gene, Dengue virus, Flaviviridae, genome-wide association analysis, genomics, hepatitis C virus, tick-borne encephalitis, West Nile virus",
author = "Yudin, {N. S.} and Barkhash, {A. V.} and Maksimov, {V. N.} and Ignatieva, {E. V.} and Romaschenko, {A. G.}",
note = "Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2018, Pleiades Publishing, Inc.",
year = "2018",
month = mar,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1134/S0026893317050223",
language = "English",
volume = "52",
pages = "165--181",
journal = "Molecular Biology",
issn = "0026-8933",
publisher = "Maik Nauka-Interperiodica Publishing",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Human Genetic Predisposition to Diseases Caused by Viruses from Flaviviridae Family

AU - Yudin, N. S.

AU - Barkhash, A. V.

AU - Maksimov, V. N.

AU - Ignatieva, E. V.

AU - Romaschenko, A. G.

N1 - Publisher Copyright: © 2018, Pleiades Publishing, Inc.

PY - 2018/3/1

Y1 - 2018/3/1

N2 - The identification of human predisposition genes to severe forms of infectious diseases is important for understanding the mechanisms of pathogenesis, as well as for the detection of the risk groups. This will allow one to carry out targeted vaccination and preventive therapy. The most common approaches to the genetic risk estimation include conducting association studies, in which the groups of patients and control individuals are compared using both preliminarily selected candidate genes and using genome-wide analysis. To search for genetic variants predisposed to severe forms of infectious diseases, it is expedient to form a control that consists of patients with clinically proven infections with asymptomatic or mild forms of the disease. The examples of the use of these approaches to identify genetic factors that predispose one to severe forms of infections caused by viruses from the Flaviviridae family are considered in the review. At present, a number of genetic markers associated with predisposition to tick-borne encephalitis, West Nile fever, and Dengue fever have already been detected. These associations must be confirmed in independent samples. Genetic variants, for which the association with spontaneous recovery during infection with hepatitis C virus, patient’s reaction on antiviral drugs, and the development of liver fibrosis was established, were also detected. The gene variants with more pronounced phenotypic effects will probably be found during further studies; they can be used in clinical practice as prognostic markers of the course and outcomes of infection with the Flaviviridae, as well as of the response to treatment.

AB - The identification of human predisposition genes to severe forms of infectious diseases is important for understanding the mechanisms of pathogenesis, as well as for the detection of the risk groups. This will allow one to carry out targeted vaccination and preventive therapy. The most common approaches to the genetic risk estimation include conducting association studies, in which the groups of patients and control individuals are compared using both preliminarily selected candidate genes and using genome-wide analysis. To search for genetic variants predisposed to severe forms of infectious diseases, it is expedient to form a control that consists of patients with clinically proven infections with asymptomatic or mild forms of the disease. The examples of the use of these approaches to identify genetic factors that predispose one to severe forms of infections caused by viruses from the Flaviviridae family are considered in the review. At present, a number of genetic markers associated with predisposition to tick-borne encephalitis, West Nile fever, and Dengue fever have already been detected. These associations must be confirmed in independent samples. Genetic variants, for which the association with spontaneous recovery during infection with hepatitis C virus, patient’s reaction on antiviral drugs, and the development of liver fibrosis was established, were also detected. The gene variants with more pronounced phenotypic effects will probably be found during further studies; they can be used in clinical practice as prognostic markers of the course and outcomes of infection with the Flaviviridae, as well as of the response to treatment.

KW - candidate gene

KW - Dengue virus

KW - Flaviviridae

KW - genome-wide association analysis

KW - genomics

KW - hepatitis C virus

KW - tick-borne encephalitis

KW - West Nile virus

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85039702436&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1134/S0026893317050223

DO - 10.1134/S0026893317050223

M3 - Review article

AN - SCOPUS:85039702436

VL - 52

SP - 165

EP - 181

JO - Molecular Biology

JF - Molecular Biology

SN - 0026-8933

IS - 2

ER -

ID: 12668284