| Literature DB >> 30079069 |
Geison Cambri1, Marcelo Távora Mira1.
Abstract
Genetics plays a crucial role in controlling susceptibility to infectious diseases by modulating the interplay between humans and pathogens. This is particularly evident in leprosy, since the etiological agent, Mycobacterium leprae, displays semiclonal characteristics not compatible with the wide spectrum of disease phenotypes. Over the past decades, genetic studies have unraveled several gene variants as risk factors for leprosy per se, disease clinical forms and the occurrence of leprosy reactions. As expected, several of these genes are immune-related; yet, hypothesis-free approaches have led to genes not classically linked to immune response. The PARK2, originally described as a Parkinson's disease gene, illustrates the case: Parkin-the protein coded by PARK2-was defined as an important player regulating innate and adaptive immune responses only years after its description as a leprosy susceptibility gene. Interestingly, even with the use of powerful hypothesis-free study designs such as genome-wide association studies, most of the major gene effect controlling leprosy susceptibility remains elusive. One hypothesis to explain this "hidden heritability" is that rare variants not captured by classic association studies are of critical importance. To address this question, massively parallel sequencing of large segments of the human genome-even whole exomes/genomes-is an alternative to properly identify rare, disease-causing mutations. These mutations may then be investigated through sophisticated approaches such as cell reprogramming and genome editing applied to create in vitro models for functional leprosy studies.Entities:
Keywords: PARK2; association studies; disease modeling; genetics; leprosy; next-generation sequencing
Year: 2018 PMID: 30079069 PMCID: PMC6062607 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2018.01674
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Pathogenesis of leprosy with selected genes impacting on its phenotypes. Adapted from Mira (12) and Sauer et al. (13). For a more detailed list of genes, please refer to Table 1. Abbreviations: I, indeterminate; LL, lepromatous leprosy; BL, borderline-lepromatous; BB, borderline–borderline; BT, borderline-tuberculoid; TT, tuberculoid–tuberculoid; T1R, type-1 reaction; T2R, type-2 reaction.
Leprosy-associated genes with functional evidence or replicated status.
| Gene | Name | Identification strategy | Population sample (Reference) | Gene function/pathway |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Caspase recruitment domain family member 9 | GWAS—protein-coding variants | Chinese case-control ( | Regulatory function in cell apoptosis and induction of NF-kB | |
| Filaggrin | GWAS—protein-coding variants | Chinese case-control ( | The structural component of the epidermis | |
| Hypoxia-inducible factor 1 alpha subunit | GWAS—protein-coding variants | Chinese case-control ( | Regulator of cellular and systemic homeostatic response to hypoxia; inflammation, autophagy, and immune reactions | |
| Major histocompatibility complex (MHC), class-I. Human leukocyte antigen (HLA) | Association scan of the HLA | Vietnamese family-based ( | Immune recognition and antigen presentation | |
| MHC, class-II. HLA | GWAS | Chinese case-control ( | Immune recognition and antigen presentation | |
| Association scan | Indian case-control ( | |||
| Candidate gene analysis | Vietnamese family-based ( | |||
| Interleukin 10 | Candidate gene analysis | Brazilian case-control ( | Immunoregulation; downregulates Th1 response and induces B-cell survival, proliferation, and antibody production | |
| Brazilian case-control ( | ||||
| Indian case-control ( | ||||
| Brazilian family-based; meta-analysis ( | ||||
| Interleukin 12B | GWAS | Chinese case-control ( | Activator of NK and T-cells. Inducer of Th1 immune response | |
| Interleukin 18 receptor accessory protein/interleukin 18 receptor 1 | GWAS | Chinese case-control ( | The receptor of IL18, a proinflammatory cytokine that induces cell-mediated immune response | |
| Interleukin 23 receptor | GWAS—protein-coding variants | Chinese case-control ( | Binds to IL23 activating NK and T-cells; pro-inflammatory receptor | |
| GWAS | Chinese case-control ( | |||
| Interleukin 27 | GWAS—protein-coding variants | Chinese case-control ( | Modulator of T-cell differentiation | |
| Killer immunoglobulin-like receptor (KIR) | Candidate gene analysis | Brazilian case-control ( | Regulatory molecules of NK cells surface; mediates NK reactivity against target cells; depending on HLA-I ligands | |
| Brazilian case-control ( | ||||
| Laccase domain containing—coiled-coil domain containing 122 | GWAS | Chinese case-control ( | LACC1 is involved in fatty-acid oxidation with inflammasome activation, ROS production, and modulation of bactericidal activity of macrophages. CCDC122 function is presently unknown | |
| Chinese case-control ( | ||||
| Candidate gene analysis | Brazilian family-based ( | |||
| Brazilian case-control ( | ||||
| Vietnamese family-based ( | ||||
| GWAS—protein-coding variants | Chinese case-control ( | |||
| Leucine rich repeat kinase 2/Dardarin | GWAS | Chinese case-control ( | Regulation of autophagy, inflammasome activity, and production of ROS and inflammatory cytokines | |
| Candidate gene analysis | Indian case-control ( | |||
| Chinese case-control ( | ||||
| Vietnamese family-based ( | ||||
| Lymphotoxin-α | Genome-wide linkage analysis | 2 Vietnamese family-based ( | Pro-inflammatory cytokine, it mediates inflammatory response | |
| Brazilian case-control ( | ||||
| Indian case-control ( | ||||
| Mannose receptor C-type 1 | Candidate gene analysis | Vietnamese family-based ( | Membrane receptor that mediates carbohydrate recognition | |
| Brazilian case-control ( | ||||
| NCK interacting protein with SH3 domain | GWAS—protein-coding variants | Chinese case-control ( | Signal transduction; regulation of cytoskeleton | |
| Nucleotide-binding oligomerization domain containing 2 | GWAS | Chinese case-control ( | Recognition of LPS bacterial structure and activation of NF-kB | |
| Candidate gene analysis | Brazilian family-based ( | |||
| Brazilian case-control ( | ||||
| Vietnamese family-based ( | ||||
| Parkin RBR E3 ubiquitin protein ligase | Genome-wide linkage analysis | Vietnamese family-based ( | E3 ubiquitin-protein ligase with a role on proteasome function, mitophagy, intracellular bacterial clearance, and mitochondrial antigen presentation | |
| Brazilian case-control ( | ||||
| Candidate gene analysis | 2 Indian case-control ( | |||
| Vietnamese family-based ( | ||||
| RAB32, member RAS oncogene family | GWAS—protein-coding variants | Chinese case-control ( | Protein metabolism, vesicle-mediated transport and autophagy | |
| GWAS | Chinese case-control ( | |||
| Receptor-interacting serine/threonine kinase 2 | GWAS | Chinese case-control ( | Signaling, innate and adaptive immune response; NF-kB inducer | |
| Chinese case-control ( | ||||
| Candidate gene analysis | Vietnamese family-based ( | |||
| Solute carrier family 29 member 3 | GWAS—protein-coding variants | Chinese case-control ( | Nucleoside transporter | |
| Toll-like receptor 1 | GWAS | Indian case-control ( | Pathogen recognition and activation of innate immunity | |
| Candidate gene analysis | Brazilian case-control ( | |||
| Brazilian family-based ( | ||||
| Toll-like receptor 2 | Candidate gene analysis | Ethiopian case-control ( | Pathogen recognition and activation of innate immunity | |
| Tumor necrosis factor alfa | Candidate-gene analysis | Brazilian family-based and case-control; meta-analysis ( | Pro-inflammatory cytokine | |
| Tumor necrosis factor (Ligand) Superfamily, Member 8/Member 15 | GWAS | Chinese case-control ( | Pro-inflammatory cytokine | |
| Candidate gene analysis | Vietnamese family-based ( | |||
| Brazilian case-control ( | ||||
| Tyrosine kinase 2 | GWAS—protein-coding variants | Chinese case-control ( | Cytokine modulator, interferon signaling pathway | |
GWAS, Genome-wide association study; ROS, reactive oxygen species; LPS, lipopolysaccharides; NK, natural killer.