Home News Weather Finance Travel Maps Movies Lottery Horoscopes Games
 SECTION: HIV & AIDS RESEARCH, POLITICS
Search The Web:
DOMAIN NAMES
AS LOW AS $2.99 / YR.
Scientist Study Genetic Variants And HIV
Wednesday, 16-Jul-2008 2:34PM United Press International
USTINET NEWS

 » Front Page

 » Top Stories

 » U.S.

 » World

 » Politics

 » Business

 » Sports

 » Health

 » Tech/Science

    Aerospace & NASA

    Computers

    Electronics

    Environment

    Nuclear

    Science

    Telecomm

 » Living/Entertainment

 » Off Beat Stories

 » News Photos

 » Weather


Special Editions

 » Iraq & Conflict

 » Israel/Palestine

 » Crimes & Laws


MultiMedia

 » Interactive Features

 » News Photos


POLL: Your Opinion

 » What Do You Think




SAN ANTONIO, July 16 (UPI) -- A genetic variation that once may have protected people of African descent from HIV now may increase their susceptibility to the virus, U.S. scientists said.

SAVE MONEY ON TRAVEL DEALS

The variation is one of the first genetic risk factors for HIV identified only in people of African descent, spotlighting how genetics play a role in susceptibility to Human Immunodeficiency Virus, the virus that causes AIDS, the University of Texas Health Science Center at San Antonio said Wednesday in a news release.

In a population of 1,266 HIV-positive U.S. military personnel and 2,000 non-infected healthy personnel, researchers studied the gene that expresses Duffy antigen receptor, a molecule on the surface of red blood cells where the malaria species Plasmodium vivax attaches.

"Duffy antigen influences levels of inflammatory and anti-HIV blood factors called chemokines", said Dr. Weijing He, first author of the paper published in Cell Host & Microbe. "Other as-yet undefined host factors likely exert population-specific effects on HIV-AIDS, such that individuals of European or African descent are likely to have distinct host factors that affect their respective susceptibilities to HIV and AIDS."

The majority of people in sub-Sahara Africa don't express Duffy on their red blood cells, said senior lead author Robin Weiss of University College London.

"This is one of the first genetic factors particularly common in Africans that has been shown to confer more susceptibility to HIV", Weiss said.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Related News Topics:

HIV and AIDS research, politics
News of Texas
Colleges and Universities
Top science, technical and computer stories
Miscellaneous science and technology stories
Disease, medicine, aids, health care research
Social issues
Miscellaneous education news

 BREAKING STORIES

Claim: Magic Johnson 'faked' AIDS

Family key to avoiding HIV in mentally ill

Study: HIV began about 80-100 years ago

Circumcision may not protect gay men

Scientists watch as HIV matures

Nobel Prize in medicine awarded to three

CDC: More than 1 million have HIV in U.S.

Risky TV sexual behavior may be modeled

Expert: Media pressures teens to have sex

Prostitute jailed for soliciting with HIV

Men 'on the down low' fear disclosure

Cost-effective HIV monitoring system found

Meek immune response helps AIDS survival

Long term sought for HIV-secretive man

Study evaluates HIV genetic screening

Florida doctors guilty of Medicare fraud

CDC: Blacks, gays most at risk for HIV

Calif. man to get his 'HIV' vanity plate

STDs increase HIV risk if exposed

Iran arrests chill anti-AIDS exchanges

Home News Weather Finance Travel Maps Movies Lottery Horoscopes Games
Home :: My Page :: My WebMail :: My Calendar :: My Portfolio :: Chat :: Help Center :: Sign In :: Sign Out

MY.USTI.NET PORTAL  -  © 1996 - 2004 USTINET CORPORATION. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
Please see our Privacy Policy, Security Guarantee, Terms of Use for additional information.