Tsao Betty P
Department of Medicine, Division of Rheumatology, UCLA School of Medicine, Los Angeles, California 90095-1670, USA.
Curr Opin Rheumatol. 2004 Sep;16(5):513-21. doi: 10.1097/01.bor.0000132648.62680.81.
Susceptibility to systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) has a genetic component. In recent years, nine complete genome scans using family collections that differ greatly in ethnic compositions and geographic locations have identified several strong, confirmed SLE susceptibility loci. Evidence implicating individual gene polymorphisms (or haplotypes) within some of the linked intervals has been reported. This review highlights recent findings that may lead to the identification of putative genes and new insights in the pathogenesis of SLE.
Eight of the best-supported SLE susceptibility loci are 1q23, 1q25-31, 1q41-42, 2q35-37, 4p16-15.2, 6p11-21, 12p24, and 16q12. These are chromosomal regions exhibiting genome-wide significance for linkage in single studies and suggestive evidence for linkage in other samples. Linkage analyses conditioning on pedigrees in which one affected member manifesting a particular clinical condition have also yielded many chromosomal regions linked to SLE. The linked interval on chromosome 6p has been narrowed to 0.5 approximately 1.0 Mb (million basepairs) of 3 MHC class II containing risk haplotypes in white subjects. Cumulative results have shown that hereditary deficiencies of complement component C4A (a MHC class III gene) confer risk for SLE in almost all ethnic groups studied. The FcgammaR genes (located at 1q23) have been convincingly demonstrated to play an important role in susceptibility to SLE (and/or lupus nephritis). The evidence for the intronic single nucleotide polymorphism of program cell death gene 1 (PDCD1 at 2q37) to confer susceptibility is promising but not yet compelling. Within several established susceptibility loci, evidence for association of positional candidate genes is emerging.
Further replications of linkage and association are the immediate task. The respective contribution of each susceptibility gene, relationships between genotypes and phenotypes, and potential interactions between susceptibility gene products need to be elucidated. This line of investigation is now well poised to provide novel insights into how genetic variants can affect functional pathways leading to the development of SLE.
系统性红斑狼疮(SLE)易感性具有遗传因素。近年来,九项利用种族构成和地理位置差异很大的家系样本进行的全基因组扫描,确定了几个明确的、已得到证实的SLE易感基因座。已有证据表明,在一些连锁区间内存在个体基因多态性(或单倍型)。本综述重点介绍了近期的研究发现,这些发现可能有助于确定潜在基因,并为SLE的发病机制提供新的见解。
八个最可靠的SLE易感基因座分别位于1q23、1q25 - 31、1q41 - 42、2q35 - 37、4p16 - 15.2、6p11 - 21、12p24和16q12。这些染色体区域在单项研究中显示出全基因组连锁的显著意义,在其他样本中也有连锁的提示性证据。对家系进行连锁分析,其中一名受影响成员表现出特定临床症状,也产生了许多与SLE连锁的染色体区域。在白人受试者中,6号染色体p臂上的连锁区间已缩小至包含3个MHC II类风险单倍型的约0.5至1.0兆碱基对(Mb)。累积结果表明,补体成分C4A(一种MHC III类基因)的遗传性缺陷在几乎所有研究的种族群体中都增加了患SLE的风险。FcγR基因(位于1q23)已被令人信服地证明在SLE(和/或狼疮性肾炎)易感性中起重要作用。程序性细胞死亡基因1(PDCD1,位于2q37)的内含子单核苷酸多态性赋予易感性的证据很有前景,但尚未令人信服。在几个已确定的易感基因座内,位置候选基因关联的证据正在出现。
连锁和关联研究的进一步重复是当务之急。需要阐明每个易感基因的各自贡献、基因型与表型之间的关系以及易感基因产物之间的潜在相互作用。这一系列研究现在已做好充分准备,能够为遗传变异如何影响导致SLE发生的功能途径提供新的见解。