Literature DB >> 1346960

Novel genetic markers of rheumatoid arthritis in Chilean patients, by DR serotyping and restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis.

A González1, S Nicovani, L Massardo, P Bull, L Rodríguez, S Jacobelli.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The analysis of genetic markers of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) in a population in which the DR4 serotype is not strongly associated with the disease.
METHODS: Chilean RA patients (56 seropositive and 22 seronegative) and 141 controls were studied by serotyping. Southern blot analysis of Bam HI restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) was done in genomic DNA from 46 patients with seropositive RA, 17 patients with seronegative RA, and 45 controls, using a complementary DNA probe specific for DRB1 genes.
RESULTS: The prevalence of the HLA-DR9 haplotype was strikingly higher in seropositive RA patients (21%) than in controls (3%) (Pcorr less than 0.0008, by Fisher's exact test; relative risk [RR] = 9.34). The prevalence of DR4 and DR1 haplotypes, although slightly increased, did not achieve a significant preponderance. The simultaneous presence of two Bam HI fragments (3.6 kb and 4.5 kb) was found with higher prevalence in seropositive patients (83%; RR = 9; Pcorr less than 0.00002) than in controls (36%), and seemed higher in seronegative RA patients as well (71%; RR = 4). Furthermore, its prevalence remained increased in comparisons of DR4 positive controls (36%) with DR4 positive seropositive patients (100%; RR = 67; Pcorr less than 0.0002) and DR4 positive seronegative patients (100%; RR = 36; Pcorr less than 0.006), even after excluding the DR9 positive individuals. A tendency toward higher association with DR1 seropositive RA patients (67%; RR = 12), a group with no DR4 or DR9 positive individuals, than in DR1 positive controls (14%), was also observed.
CONCLUSION: The HLA-DR9 haplotype was definitively consolidated as a very strong genetic marker exclusively for seropositive RA in Chilean patients, as suggested by our previous observations. RFLP analysis showed that the simultaneous presence of 3.6-kb and 4.5-kb Bam HI fragments constituted a better RA marker than did any of the heretofore studied haplotypes. These fragments together would be linked to RA independently of the DR1, DR4, and DR9 haplotypes. The overall evidence indicates that Chilean seropositive RA patients display a genetic background that is different from that underlying RA susceptibility in other populations and suggests the existence of common, as well as distinct, genetic elements predisposing to seronegative and seropositive RA.

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Year:  1992        PMID: 1346960     DOI: 10.1002/art.1780350306

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Arthritis Rheum        ISSN: 0004-3591


  4 in total

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3.  Weak CD4+ T-cell responses to citrullinated vimentin in rheumatoid arthritis patients carrying HLA-DR9 alleles.

Authors:  Diego Catalán; Octavio Aravena; Roberto Zúñiga; Natalia Silva; Alejandro Escobar; Francisca Sabugo; Pamela Wurmann; Lilian Soto; Rodrigo González; Jorge Alfaro; Milton Larrondo; Miguel Cuchacovich; Juan Carlos Aguillón
Journal:  Rheumatol Int       Date:  2011-07-19       Impact factor: 2.631

4.  Immune response of HLA-DQ8 transgenic mice to peptides from the third hypervariable region of HLA-DRB1 correlates with predisposition to rheumatoid arthritis.

Authors:  E Zanelli; C J Krco; J M Baisch; S Cheng; C S David
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  1996-03-05       Impact factor: 11.205

  4 in total

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