A functional candidate screen for coeliac disease genes

被引:0
|
作者
Christine R Curley
Alienke J Monsuur
Martin C Wapenaar
John D Rioux
Cisca Wijmenga
机构
[1] The Broad Institute,DBG
[2] Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Harvard University,Department of Medical Genetics
[3] Complex Genetics Section,undefined
[4] University Medical Centre Utrecht,undefined
[5] Université de Montreal and the Montreal Heart Institute/Institut de Cardiologie de Montreal,undefined
来源
关键词
coeliac disease; inflammatory bowel disease; inflammation; candidate gene study; IBD5;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
It is increasingly evident that different inflammatory disorders show some overlap in their pathological features, concurrence in families and individuals, and shared genetic factors. This might also be true for coeliac disease, a chronic inflammatory disorder of the gastrointestinal system, which shares two linkage regions with inflammatory bowel disease: on chromosome 5q31 (CELIAC2 and IBD5) and 19p13 (CELIAC4 and IBD6). We hypothesised that these regions contain genes that contribute to susceptibility to both disorders. The overlapping 5q31 region contains only five positional candidate genes, whereas the overlapping 19p13 region has 141 genes. As the common disease gene probably plays a role in inflammation, we selected five functional candidate genes from the 19p13 region. We studied these 10 positional and functional candidate genes in our Dutch coeliac disease cohort using 44 haplotype tagging single-nucleotide polymorphisms. Two genes from 19p13 showed a small effect on familial clustering: the cytochrome P450 F3 gene CYP4F3 (Pnominal 0.0375, odds ratio (OR) 1.77) and CYP4F2 (Pnominal 0.013, OR 1.33). CYP4F3 and CYP4F2 catalyse the inactivation of leukotriene B4 (LTB4), a potent mediator of inflammation responsible for recruitment and activation of neutrophils. The genetic association of LTB4-regulating gene variants connects the innate immune response of neutrophil mobilisation with that of the established Th1 adaptive immunity present in coeliac disease patients. The findings in coeliac disease need to be replicated. Expanding genetic association studies of these cytochrome genes to other inflammatory conditions should reveal whether their causative influence extends beyond coeliac disease.
引用
收藏
页码:1215 / 1222
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] A functional candidate screen for coeliac disease genes
    Curley, Christine R.
    Monsuur, Alienke J.
    Wapenaar, Martin C.
    Rioux, John D.
    Wijmenga, Cisca
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS, 2006, 14 (11) : 1215 - 1222
  • [2] A microarray screen for novel candidate genes in coeliac disease pathogenesis
    Diosdado, B
    Wapenaar, MC
    Franke, L
    Duran, KJ
    Goerres, MJ
    Hadithi, M
    Crusius, JBA
    Meijer, JWR
    Duggan, DJ
    Mulder, CJJ
    Holstege, FCP
    Wijmenga, C
    GUT, 2004, 53 (07) : 944 - 951
  • [3] A yeast functional screen predicts new candidate ALS disease genes
    Couthouis, Julien
    Hart, Michael P.
    Shorter, James
    DeJesus-Hernandez, Mariely
    Erion, Renske
    Oristano, Rachel
    Liu, Annie X.
    Ramos, Daniel
    Jethava, Niti
    Hosangadi, Divya
    Epstein, James
    Chiang, Ashley
    Diaz, Zamia
    Nakaya, Tadashi
    Ibrahim, Fadia
    Kim, Hyung-Jun
    Solski, Jennifer A.
    Williams, Kelly L.
    Mojsilovic-Petrovic, Jelena
    Ingre, Caroline
    Boylan, Kevin
    Graff-Radford, Neill R.
    Dickson, Dennis W.
    Clay-Falcone, Dana
    Elman, Lauren
    McCluskey, Leo
    Greene, Robert
    Kalb, Robert G.
    Lee, Virginia M. -Y.
    Trojanowski, John Q.
    Ludolph, Albert
    Robberecht, Wim
    Andersen, Peter M.
    Nicholson, Garth A.
    Blair, Ian P.
    King, Oliver D.
    Bonini, Nancy M.
    Van Deerlin, Vivianna
    Rademakers, Rosa
    Mourelatos, Zissimos
    Gitler, Aaron D.
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 2011, 108 (52) : 20881 - 20890
  • [4] Linkage analysis of candidate regions for coeliac disease genes
    Houlston, RS
    Tomlinson, IPM
    Ford, D
    Seal, S
    Marossy, AM
    Ferguson, A
    Holmes, GKT
    Hosie, KB
    Howdle, PD
    Jewell, DP
    Godkin, A
    Kerr, GD
    Kumar, P
    Logan, RFA
    Love, AHG
    Johnston, S
    Marsh, MN
    Mitton, S
    ODonoghue, D
    Roberts, A
    WalkerSmith, JA
    Stratton, MF
    HUMAN MOLECULAR GENETICS, 1997, 6 (08) : 1335 - 1339
  • [5] To screen or not to screen for coeliac disease
    Maki, M
    CHANGING FEATURES OF COELIAC DISEASE, 1998, : 51 - 53
  • [6] LONGITUDINAL GENE EXPRESSION ANALYSIS OF CANDIDATE GENES IN COELIAC DISEASE
    Galatola, M.
    Panico, C.
    Cielo, D.
    Carbone, L.
    Auricchio, R.
    Greco, L.
    DIGESTIVE AND LIVER DISEASE, 2015, 47 : E275 - E276
  • [7] Coeliac disease candidate genes:: No association with functional polymorphisms in matrix metalloproteinase 1 and 3 gene promoters
    Louka, AS
    Stensby, EK
    Ek, J
    Gudjónsdóttir, AH
    Ascher, H
    Sollid, LM
    SCANDINAVIAN JOURNAL OF GASTROENTEROLOGY, 2002, 37 (08) : 931 - 935
  • [8] Coeliac disease: to screen or not to screen, that is the question
    Duggan, John M.
    Duggan, Anne E.
    MEDICAL JOURNAL OF AUSTRALIA, 2009, 190 (08) : 404 - 405
  • [9] Should we screen for coeliac disease? No
    Evans, Kate E.
    McAllister, Ruth
    Sanders, David S.
    BMJ-BRITISH MEDICAL JOURNAL, 2009, 339
  • [10] Is it time to screen for adult coeliac disease?
    Evans, Kate Emma
    Hadjivassiliou, Marios
    Sanders, David S.
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF GASTROENTEROLOGY & HEPATOLOGY, 2011, 23 (10) : 833 - 838