| Literature DB >> 15743475 |
Hulya Bukulmez1, Mark Fife, Monica Tsoras, Susan D Thompson, Natalie A Twine, Patricia Woo, Jane M Olson, Robert C Elston, David N Glass, Robert A Colbert.
Abstract
Juvenile rheumatoid arthritis (JRA) comprises a group of chronic systemic inflammatory disorders that primarily affect joints and can cause long-term disability. JRA is likely to be a complex genetic trait, or a series of such traits, with both genetic and environmental factors contributing to the risk for developing the disease and to its progression. The HLA region on the short arm of chromosome 6 has been intensively evaluated for genetic contributors to JRA, and multiple associations, and more recently linkage, has been detected. Other genes involved in innate and acquired immunity also map to near the HLA cluster on 6p, and it is possible that variation within these genes also confers risk for developing JRA. We examined the TPSN gene, which encodes tapasin, an endoplasmic reticulum chaperone that is involved in antigen processing, to elucidate its involvement, if any, in JRA. We employed both a case-control approach and the transmission disequilibrium test, and found linkage and association between the TPSN allele (Arg260) and the systemic onset subtype of JRA. Two independent JRA cohorts were used, one recruited from the Rheumatology Clinic at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center (82 simplex families) and one collected by the British Paediatric Rheumatology Group in London, England (74 simplex families). The transmission disequilibrium test for these cohorts combined was statistically significant (chi2 = 4.2, one degree of freedom; P = 0.04). Linkage disequilibrium testing between the HLA alleles that are known to be associated with systemic onset JRA did not reveal linkage disequilibrium with the Arg260 allele, either in the Cincinnati systemic onset JRA cohort or in 113 Caucasian healthy individuals. These results suggest that there is a weak association between systemic onset JRA and the TPSN polymorphism, possibly due to linkage disequilibrium with an as yet unknown susceptibility allele in the centromeric part of chromosome 6.Entities:
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Year: 2005 PMID: 15743475 PMCID: PMC1065319 DOI: 10.1186/ar1480
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arthritis Res Ther ISSN: 1478-6354 Impact factor: 5.156
Tapasin genotypic distributions in systemic onset juvenile rheumatoid arthritis families
| Tapasin genotypes | US healthy control individuals | US healthy siblings of SoJRA | US SoJRA | UK SoJRA | UK and US SoJRA |
| 0101 | 35 (31.0%) | 26 (28.0%) | 49 (36.6%) | 23 (30.0%) | 72 (34.4%) |
| 0102 | 56 (49.5%) | 50 (53.7%) | 63 (47.0%) | 45 (60.0%) | 108 (51.6%) |
| 0202 | 22 (19.5%) | 17 (18.3%) | 22 (16.4%) | 7 (9.2%) | 29 (14.0%) |
| 01 allele frequency | 0.56 | 0.55 | 0.6 | 0.6 | 0.6 |
| 02 allele frequency | 0.44 | 0.45 | 0.4 | 0.4 | 0.4 |
| Total | 113 | 93 | 134 | 76 | 209 |
Tapasin 01 allele is Arg260, and 02 is Thr260. SoJRA, systemic onset juvenile rheumatoid arthritis.
Transmission disequilibrium test analysis of the US and UK systemic onset juvenile rheumatoid arthritis families using Transmit
| Arg260 transmission | Thr260 transmission | ||||||
| SoJRA families | Observed | Expected | Observed | Expected | χ2 (1 df) | ||
| US only | 82 | 99 | (88.0) | 65 | (75.9) | 6.0* | 0.01* |
| US unaffected siblings | 79 | 82 | (77.5) | 76 | (80.5) | 1.04 | 0.3 |
| UK only | 74 | 91 | (89.0) | 57 | (58.0) | 0.08 | 0.78 |
| UK and US together | 156 | 190 | (177.8) | 122 | (134.2) | 4.2* | 0.04* |
*Significant findings. n, number of informative families for transmission; UK, British Paediatric Rheumatology Study Group cohort; US, Cincinnati cohort.