Abstract

Genome-wide association studies discovered interferon lambda (IFNL or IFN-λ) locus on chromosome 19 to be involved in clearance of chronic hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection in patients following interferon-α-ribavirin (IFN-RBV) therapy. Subsequent studies established a dinucleotide polymorphism rs368234815, as the prime causal variant behind this association. The ΔG allele of this variant gives rise to a new IFNL gene, IFNL4, coding for IFN-λ4 whose activity paradoxically associates with lesser viral clearance rates. A low-frequency, nonsynonymous single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) rs117648444 within the 2nd exon of IFNL4 changes the 70th amino acid from proline to serine resulting in lower activity of the functional IFN-λ4 protein, thereby increasing HCV clearance rates. In the present study, we used a cohort of genotype 3 HCV-infected patients, drawn from different geographical regions of India who underwent IFN-RBV therapy, to examine the association of several important IFNL locus SNPs/variants with sustained virological response (SVR). Intriguingly, the causal variant rs368234815 did not show the best strength and significance of association with SVR, while further analysis revealed that a negative confounding effect of rs117648444 was responsible for this phenomenon. Our results indicate that IFNL locus SNPs are subject to either a positive or a negative confounding effect by rs117648444; the nature of confounding depends on the linkage of the IFNL SNPs with the low-activity IFN-λ4-generating minor allele of rs117648444. Thus, our work demonstrates that the linkage disequilibrium structure of the IFNL region may confound the results of association studies. These results have implications for the design and understanding of future case-control studies involving IFNL locus SNPs/variants.

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