Huizinga Tom W J, Amos Christopher I, van der Helm-van Mil Annette H M, Chen Wei, van Gaalen Floris A, Jawaheer Damini, Schreuder Geziena M T, Wener Mark, Breedveld Ferdinand C, Ahmad Naila, Lum Raymond F, de Vries Rene R P, Gregersen Peter K, Toes Rene E M, Criswell Lindsey A
Department of Rheumatology-C4R, Leiden University Medical Center, PO Box 9600, 2300 RC Leiden, The Netherlands.
Arthritis Rheum. 2005 Nov;52(11):3433-8. doi: 10.1002/art.21385.
The main genetic risk factor for rheumatoid arthritis (RA), the HLA region, has been known for 25 years. Previous research has demonstrated, within the RA population, an association between HLA-DRB1 alleles carrying the shared epitope (SE) and antibodies directed against cyclic citrullinated peptides (anti-CCP antibodies). We undertook this study to make the first comparison of SE allele frequencies in the healthy population with those in RA patients who do or do not harbor anti-CCP antibodies.
HLA-DRB1 typing was performed in 408 RA patients from the Leiden Early Arthritis Clinic (the Leiden EAC; a Dutch population-based inception cohort in which disease course was followed up over time), in 423 healthy Dutch controls, and in 720 affected members of 341 US multiplex (sibpair) families of Caucasian origin from the North American RA Consortium (NARAC) with well-established disease and fulfilling the American College of Rheumatology classification criteria for RA. The presence of anti-CCP antibodies was determined by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay.
For the Leiden EAC, the odds ratio (OR) describing the association of 2 copies of the SE allele with anti-CCP positivity (using no copies of the SE allele in the healthy control group as the referent) was 11.79 (P < 0.0001), while the OR for 1 SE allele was 4.37 (P < 0.0001). No association with the SE was observed in the Dutch anti-CCP-negative RA patients. For the NARAC families, linkage and association analysis revealed the SE to be associated only with anti-CCP-positive disease and not with anti-CCP-negative disease. Stratified analyses indicated that anti-CCP antibodies primarily mediated association of the SE with joint damage or disease persistence.
HLA-DRB1 alleles encoding the SE are specific for disease characterized by antibodies to citrullinated peptides, indicating that these alleles do not associate with RA as such, but rather with a particular phenotype.
类风湿关节炎(RA)的主要遗传危险因素——HLA区域,已被人们知晓25年。以往研究已在RA人群中证实,携带共同表位(SE)的HLA - DRB1等位基因与抗环瓜氨酸肽抗体(抗CCP抗体)之间存在关联。我们开展本研究,首次比较健康人群与有或无抗CCP抗体的RA患者中SE等位基因频率。
对来自莱顿早期关节炎诊所(莱顿EAC;一个基于荷兰人群的起始队列,对疾病病程进行长期随访)的408例RA患者、423名健康荷兰对照以及来自北美RA联盟(NARAC)的341个白种人起源的美国家系(同胞对)中的720名患病成员进行HLA - DRB1分型,这些患者病情明确且符合美国风湿病学会RA分类标准。通过酶联免疫吸附测定法检测抗CCP抗体的存在情况。
对于莱顿EAC,描述SE等位基因2份拷贝与抗CCP阳性之间关联的优势比(OR)(以健康对照组中无SE等位基因拷贝为参照)为11.79(P < 0.0001),而1份SE等位基因的OR为4.37(P < 0.0001)。在荷兰抗CCP阴性的RA患者中未观察到与SE的关联。对于NARAC家系,连锁及关联分析显示SE仅与抗CCP阳性疾病相关,而与抗CCP阴性疾病无关。分层分析表明,抗CCP抗体主要介导SE与关节损伤或疾病持续存在之间的关联。
编码SE的HLA - DRB1等位基因对以抗瓜氨酸化肽抗体为特征的疾病具有特异性,这表明这些等位基因并非与RA本身相关,而是与一种特定表型相关。