Genetic susceptibility to mycobacteria and other infectious pathogens in humans.

Substantial evidence exists that host genes are important in determining the outcome of infection with mycobacteria and other intracellular pathogens. Geographical variation in the prevalence of malaria has facilitated the recognition of many genes important in determining interindividual variabilit...

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Autores principales: Bellamy, R, Hill, A
Formato: Journal article
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 1998
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author Bellamy, R
Hill, A
author_facet Bellamy, R
Hill, A
author_sort Bellamy, R
collection OXFORD
description Substantial evidence exists that host genes are important in determining the outcome of infection with mycobacteria and other intracellular pathogens. Geographical variation in the prevalence of malaria has facilitated the recognition of many genes important in determining interindividual variability in susceptibility to the severe forms of this infection. This success has, however, been difficult to achieve in other infectious diseases. Recently a variety of study designs including large-scale association-based population case/control studies of candidate genes, family-based linkage studies, investigation of rare individuals with exceptional mycobacterial susceptibility and comparison with mouse models of disease has enabled identification of host genes which contribute to susceptibility to mycobacterial disease. This work demonstrates that a large number of genes are probably important in susceptibility to mycobacterial pathogens and provides a model for the investigation of genetic susceptibility to other infectious diseases.
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spelling oxford-uuid:76bb9526-dbbc-4a89-8a75-ce9137e18c4c2022-03-26T20:18:10ZGenetic susceptibility to mycobacteria and other infectious pathogens in humans.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:76bb9526-dbbc-4a89-8a75-ce9137e18c4cEnglishSymplectic Elements at Oxford1998Bellamy, RHill, ASubstantial evidence exists that host genes are important in determining the outcome of infection with mycobacteria and other intracellular pathogens. Geographical variation in the prevalence of malaria has facilitated the recognition of many genes important in determining interindividual variability in susceptibility to the severe forms of this infection. This success has, however, been difficult to achieve in other infectious diseases. Recently a variety of study designs including large-scale association-based population case/control studies of candidate genes, family-based linkage studies, investigation of rare individuals with exceptional mycobacterial susceptibility and comparison with mouse models of disease has enabled identification of host genes which contribute to susceptibility to mycobacterial disease. This work demonstrates that a large number of genes are probably important in susceptibility to mycobacterial pathogens and provides a model for the investigation of genetic susceptibility to other infectious diseases.
spellingShingle Bellamy, R
Hill, A
Genetic susceptibility to mycobacteria and other infectious pathogens in humans.
title Genetic susceptibility to mycobacteria and other infectious pathogens in humans.
title_full Genetic susceptibility to mycobacteria and other infectious pathogens in humans.
title_fullStr Genetic susceptibility to mycobacteria and other infectious pathogens in humans.
title_full_unstemmed Genetic susceptibility to mycobacteria and other infectious pathogens in humans.
title_short Genetic susceptibility to mycobacteria and other infectious pathogens in humans.
title_sort genetic susceptibility to mycobacteria and other infectious pathogens in humans
work_keys_str_mv AT bellamyr geneticsusceptibilitytomycobacteriaandotherinfectiouspathogensinhumans
AT hilla geneticsusceptibilitytomycobacteriaandotherinfectiouspathogensinhumans