- Martin, Maureen P;
- Naranbhai, Vivek;
- Shea, Patrick R;
- Qi, Ying;
- Ramsuran, Veron;
- Vince, Nicolas;
- Gao, Xiaojiang;
- Thomas, Rasmi;
- Brumme, Zabrina L;
- Carlson, Jonathan M;
- Wolinsky, Steven M;
- Goedert, James J;
- Walker, Bruce D;
- Segal, Florencia P;
- Deeks, Steven G;
- Haas, David W;
- Migueles, Stephen A;
- Connors, Mark;
- Michael, Nelson;
- Fellay, Jacques;
- Gostick, Emma;
- Llewellyn-Lacey, Sian;
- Price, David A;
- Lafont, Bernard A;
- Pymm, Phillip;
- Saunders, Philippa M;
- Widjaja, Jacqueline;
- Wong, Shu Cheng;
- Vivian, Julian P;
- Rossjohn, Jamie;
- Brooks, Andrew G;
- Carrington, Mary
HLA-B*57 control of HIV involves enhanced CD8+ T cell responses against infected cells, but extensive heterogeneity exists in the level of HIV control among B*57+ individuals. Using whole-genome sequencing of untreated B*57+ HIV-1-infected controllers and noncontrollers, we identified a single variant (rs643347A/G) encoding an isoleucine-to-valine substitution at position 47 (I47V) of the inhibitory killer cell immunoglobulin-like receptor KIR3DL1 as the only significant modifier of B*57 protection. The association was replicated in an independent cohort and across multiple outcomes. The modifying effect of I47V was confined to B*57:01 and was not observed for the closely related B*57:03. Positions 2, 47, and 54 tracked one another nearly perfectly, and 2 KIR3DL1 allotypes differing only at these 3 positions showed significant differences in binding B*57:01 tetramers, whereas the protective allotype showed lower binding. Thus, variation in an immune NK cell receptor that binds B*57:01 modifies its protection. These data highlight the exquisite specificity of KIR-HLA interactions in human health and disease.