| Literature DB >> 27483258 |
Jung Eun Kim1, Jong Sic Kim2, Dae Ho Cho3, Hyun Jeong Park4.
Abstract
Atopic dermatitis (AD) is a multifactorial inflammatory skin disease resulting from interactions between genetic susceptibility and environmental factors. The pathogenesis of AD is poorly understood, and the treatment of recalcitrant AD is still challenging. There is accumulating evidence for new gene polymorphisms related to the epidermal barrier function and innate and adaptive immunity in patients with AD. Newly-found T cells and dendritic cell subsets, cytokines, chemokines and signaling pathways have extended our understanding of the molecular pathomechanism underlying AD. Genetic changes caused by environmental factors have been shown to contribute to the pathogenesis of AD. We herein present a review of the genetics, epigenetics, barrier dysfunction and immunological abnormalities in AD with a focus on updated molecular biology.Entities:
Keywords: atopic dermatitis; barrier; epigenomics; genetics; immunologic abnormalities
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27483258 PMCID: PMC5000632 DOI: 10.3390/ijms17081234
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Susceptibility genes for skin barrier and immunity in atopic dermatitis.
| Gene | Locus | Alleles or Mutation | SNP | Population | Disease Severity | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||||
|
| 1q21.3 | Loss-of-function | R501X, 2282del4 | European, Chinese, Singaporean | Increases the risk of AD correlated with severity | [ |
|
| 1q21.3 | Premature stop codon | rs12568784, Q2053del224 | African American | More persistent AD | [ |
|
| 5q31 | Loss-of-function | rs2303070 T | Taiwanese | Increases the risk of AD | [ |
| E420K | Italian | Increases the risk of AD | [ | |||
|
| 1q21.3 | Copy number variation | rs28989168 | German | Increases the risk of AD | [ |
|
| Missense mutation | rs6684514 | Ireland | Increases the risk of AD | [ | |
|
| 3q28 | Haplotype-tagging | rs893051 | African American | Increases the risk of AD | [ |
| AG or GG genotype | rs9290929 | Korean | Mold infection | [ | ||
|
| ||||||
|
| 4 | Missense mutation | R753Q | German, Italian | Severe AD | [ |
| A | 16934T | German, Japanese | Severe AD | [ | ||
|
| 9 | N/A | D299G | Italian | Increased in AD | [ |
| 896A/G | N/A | Ukrainian | Increased viral respiratory infections | [ | ||
|
| 3 | TT | C-1237T | German | Intrinsic AD | [ |
|
| N/A | rs2907748 | German | Allergen sensitization | [ | |
|
| 8 | haplotype CT | rs5743399 | Korean | allergen sensitization | [ |
| N/A | rs5743409 | Korean | AD | [ | ||
|
| 5q22 | C/T | rs1898671 | European American | Eczema herpeticum | [ |
|
| ||||||
|
| 11q22 | G-allele | rs1946518 | Chinese | Low risk of AD | [ |
|
| 2q12 | N/A | rs6419573 | Japanese | Increase the risk of AD | [ |
|
| chr3 | IVS-798A/T, haplotype TA | rs582504, rs582054, rs2243151 | Korean | Increase the risk of AD | [ |
|
| chr5 | TT | rs438421, rs2066446 | Korean | Allergen sensitization | [ |
|
| 12/6q23-24 | Loss-of-function | V14M and Y397C | African American | Eczema herpeticum | [ |
|
| 5q31-33 | T allele | 590 C/T of IL-4 promoter | Egyptian | Increase the risk of AD | [ |
|
| 16 | Gain of function | I50V, Q576R | Egyptian | Increase the risk of AD | [ |
|
| 5q31.1 | N/A | rs12188917 | Association with asthma | [ | |
|
| 12 | Minor allele homozygotes | rs324011 | German | Low risk of AD | [ |
|
| 12 | Haplotype AAA and GAA | 1066, −2057, and ivs2 + 12 | polish | High IL-31 serum level severe pruritus | [ |
|
| AA genotype | 152 G/A | polish | Severe AD in coexistence of asthma | [ | |
|
| 1 | N/A | promoter | Japanese | Allergen sensitization | [ |
|
| N/A | |||||
|
| 17.35 | 28G | N/A | German | Allergen sensitization | [ |
| 403A overexpression | N/A | Japanese, German | Allergen sensitization | [ | ||
|
| ||||||
|
| 20q54 | Major C allele | rs2248359 | German | Severe AD | [ |
|
| 20q13 | AT | rs7975232 | Chinese | Severe, eosinophilia and high IgE levels | [ |
|
| ||||||
| BDNF | 11 | T | C270T | Chinese | Intrinsic AD and male sex | [ |
N/A: not available.
Figure 1Barrier and immune network in the pathogenesis of atopic dermatitis. Red words: drug name; Dotted line (chronic stage): disease progression; Line: secretion.