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Genetic susceptibility to invasive Nontyphoidal Salmonella disease in African children

Nontyphoidal Salmonella (NTS) causes invasive, and frequently fatal, disease in African children. The burden of disease secondary to NTS reflects inadequacy of Salmonella-control strategies in Africa, with expanding antibiotic resistance, and no licensed anti-NTS vaccine. The delivery of improved interventions to prevent, diagnose, and treat invasive NTS (iNTS) infection, will be facilitated by an improved understanding of the biological determinants of susceptibility to iNTS, including host genetic factors. To identify host genetic determinants of iNTS disease, we performed a GWAS and replication analysis of NTS bacteraemia in African children. This analysis identified and validated a common genetic variant in STAT4 associated with increased iNTS risk. To characterise the function of the NTS-associated STAT4 variant, we utilised a genotype-selectable bioresource of healthy European adults and samples from African children with iNTS disease. In these experiments, the risk genotype at STAT4 is associated with reduced STAT4 RNA expression in stimulated leukocytes, and reduced IFNγ production in both ex vivo stimulated natural killer cells and in the serum of African children with acute NTS bacteraemia. To validate genetic variation suggestively associated with NTS bacteraemia in the GWAS, NTS-associated loci with evidence of regulatory function were prioritised for functional characterisation. Using in vitro models of intracellular Salmonella infection and RNA interference, I characterise the role of a candidate NTS-susceptibility determinant, EVI5L, in Salmonella infections. Finally, applying a pathway enrichment analysis to the NTS bacteraemia GWAS demonstrated that NTS-associated genetic variation in African children is enriched for methionine salvage enzymes. I further investigate the potential for host-pathogen interaction in this pathway, generating and characterising Salmonella mutants deficient in methionine metabolism. Taken together, these data represent the first unbiased assessment of genetic susceptibility to iNTS disease in unselected populations. These results have important implications for the design of Salmonella-control strategies for use in Africa.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:bl.uk/oai:ethos.bl.uk:730264
Date January 2016
CreatorsGilchrist, James
ContributorsHill, Adrian ; MacLennan, Calman
PublisherUniversity of Oxford
Source SetsEthos UK
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeElectronic Thesis or Dissertation
Sourcehttps://ora.ox.ac.uk/objects/uuid:cd5097bf-1279-423b-a5e5-5cda104dae7f

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