Literature DB >> 16609350

Immunogenetic risk and protective factors for the idiopathic inflammatory myopathies: distinct HLA-A, -B, -Cw, -DRB1, and -DQA1 allelic profiles distinguish European American patients with different myositis autoantibodies.

Terrance P O'Hanlon1, Danielle Mercatante Carrick, Ira N Targoff, Frank C Arnett, John D Reveille, Mary Carrington, Xiaojiang Gao, Chester V Oddis, Penelope A Morel, James D Malley, Karen Malley, Ejaz A Shamim, Lisa G Rider, Stephen J Chanock, Charles B Foster, Thomas Bunch, Perry J Blackshear, Paul H Plotz, Lori A Love, Frederick W Miller.   

Abstract

The idiopathic inflammatory myopathies (IIM) are systemic connective tissue diseases defined by chronic muscle inflammation and weakness associated with autoimmunity. We have performed low to high resolution molecular typing to assess the genetic variability of major histocompatibility complex loci (HLA-A, -B, -Cw, -DRB1, and -DQA1) in a large population of European American patients with IIM (n = 571) representing the major myositis autoantibody groups. We established that alleles of the 8.1 ancestral haplotype (8.1 AH) are important risk factors for the development of IIM in patients producing anti-synthetase/anti-Jo-1, -La, -PM/Scl, and -Ro autoantibodies. Moreover, a random forests classification analysis suggested that 8.1 AH-associated alleles B*0801 and DRB1*0301 are the principal HLA risk markers. In addition, we have identified several novel HLA susceptibility factors associated distinctively with particular myositis-specific (MSA) and myositis-associated autoantibody (MAA) groups of the IIM. IIM patients with anti-PL-7 (anti-threonyl-tRNA synthetase) autoantibodies have a unique HLA Class I risk allele, Cw*0304 (pcorr = 0.046), and lack the 8.1 AH markers associated with other anti-synthetase autoantibodies (for example, anti-Jo-1 and anti-PL-12). In addition, HLA-B*5001 and DQA1*0104 are novel potential risk factors among anti-signal recognition particle autoantibody-positive IIM patients (pcorr = 0.024 and p = 0.010, respectively). Among those patients with MAA, HLA DRB1*11 and DQA1*06 alleles were identified as risk factors for myositis patients with anti-Ku (pcorr = 0.041) and anti-La (pcorr = 0.023) autoantibodies, respectively. Amino acid sequence analysis of the HLA DRB1 third hypervariable region identified a consensus motif, 70D (hydrophilic)/71R (basic)/74A (hydrophobic), conferring protection among patients producing anti-synthetase/anti-Jo-1 and -PM/Scl autoantibodies. Together, these data demonstrate that HLA signatures, comprising both risk and protective alleles or motifs, distinguish IIM patients with different myositis autoantibodies and may have diagnostic and pathogenic implications. Variations in associated polymorphisms for these immune response genes may reflect divergent pathogenic mechanisms and/or responses to unique environmental triggers in different groups of subjects resulting in the heterogeneous syndromes of the IIM.

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Year:  2006        PMID: 16609350     DOI: 10.1097/01.md.0000217525.82287.eb

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Medicine (Baltimore)        ISSN: 0025-7974            Impact factor:   1.889


  50 in total

1.  HLA-DRB1 the notorious gene in the mosaic of autoimmunity.

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2.  Deciphering the clinical presentations, pathogenesis, and treatment of the idiopathic inflammatory myopathies.

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3.  Increased frequency of DRB1*11:01 in anti-hydroxymethylglutaryl-coenzyme A reductase-associated autoimmune myopathy.

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4.  A three-way interplay of DR4, autoantibodies and synovitis in biopsy-proven idiopathic inflammatory myositis.

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Journal:  Rheumatol Int       Date:  2010-12-02       Impact factor: 2.631

Review 5.  Autoimmune myopathies: autoantibodies, phenotypes and pathogenesis.

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Journal:  Nat Rev Neurol       Date:  2011-06-08       Impact factor: 42.937

6.  Immunoglobulin gene polymorphisms are susceptibility factors in clinical and autoantibody subgroups of the idiopathic inflammatory myopathies.

Authors:  Terrance P O'Hanlon; Lisa G Rider; Adam Schiffenbauer; Ira N Targoff; Karen Malley; Janardan P Pandey; Frederick W Miller
Journal:  Arthritis Rheum       Date:  2008-10

7.  Myositis autoantibodies in Korean patients with inflammatory myositis: anti-140-kDa polypeptide antibody is primarily associated with rapidly progressive interstitial lung disease independent of clinically amyopathic dermatomyositis.

Authors:  Eun Ha Kang; Ran Nakashima; Tsuneyo Mimori; Jinhyun Kim; Yun Jong Lee; Eun Bong Lee; Yeong Wook Song
Journal:  BMC Musculoskelet Disord       Date:  2010-09-28       Impact factor: 2.362

8.  Genetic risk and protective factors for the idiopathic inflammatory myopathies.

Authors:  Terrance P O'Hanlon; Frederick W Miller
Journal:  Curr Rheumatol Rep       Date:  2009-08       Impact factor: 4.592

9.  Brief report: antisynthetase syndrome-associated myocarditis.

Authors:  Kavita Sharma; Ana-Maria Orbai; Dipan Desai; Oscar H Cingolani; Marc K Halushka; Lisa Christopher-Stine; Andrew L Mammen; Katherine C Wu; Sammy Zakaria
Journal:  J Card Fail       Date:  2014-07-29       Impact factor: 5.712

10.  Age and gender related differences in human parotid gland gene expression.

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Journal:  Arch Oral Biol       Date:  2008-06-20       Impact factor: 2.633

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