Herrera B M, Ramagopalan S V, Lincoln M R, Orton S M, Chao M J, Sadovnick A D, Ebers G C
Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics, Department of Clinical Neurology, University of Oxford, UK.
Neurology. 2008 Sep 9;71(11):799-803. doi: 10.1212/01.wnl.0000312377.50395.00. Epub 2008 May 14.
Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a complex neurologic disease of unknown etiology and inheritance pattern, but with increasing incidence among females. The study of aunt/uncle-niece/nephew (AUNN) pairs has potential to shed light on the on complex trait inheritance as this group can be divided into eight different pair types by gender, MS status, and parent of origin.
Using a cohort of 807 avuncular MS families with 938 affected AUNN pairs ascertained from a longitudinal, population-based Canadian database, we examined differential MS transmission by separating affected pairs into likely maternal and paternal trait origin.
We observed an increased number of avuncular pairs connected through unaffected mothers compared to unaffected fathers (p = 0.008). To restrict confounders introduced by families with multiple pairs the overall number of maternal and paternal families were compared, to reveal a significantly higher number of maternal families (p = 0.038). Female-to-male sex ratios were higher among affected nieces/nephews when compared to the sex ratio for aunts/uncles (0.00042).
This observation independently confirms previous findings of a "maternal parent-of-origin" effect in multiple sclerosis (MS) susceptibility. These findings highlight the special contribution that can be derived from avuncular pairs. These underutilized pairings can compare transmission by the gender of affected aunt-uncle, the unaffected transmitting parent, and by that of the affected offspring. This strategy may be especially profitable in diseases where parent-of-origin effects are being sought. These findings also independently confirm the increasing rate of MS in females, demonstrating that familial cases are influenced by the same environmental factors as the general MS population.
多发性硬化症(MS)是一种病因和遗传模式不明的复杂神经系统疾病,但在女性中的发病率呈上升趋势。对姑姨/叔伯 - 侄女/侄子(AUNN)配对的研究有可能揭示复杂性状的遗传情况,因为这一群体可根据性别、MS状态和起源亲本分为八种不同的配对类型。
利用从加拿大一个基于人群的纵向数据库中确定的807个患有MS的叔伯侄家庭队列,其中有938对受影响的AUNN配对,我们通过将受影响的配对分为可能的母系和父系性状起源来检查MS的差异传递。
我们观察到,与通过未受影响的父亲建立联系的叔伯侄配对相比,通过未受影响的母亲建立联系的配对数量有所增加(p = 0.008)。为了限制有多对配对的家庭引入的混杂因素,我们比较了母系和父系家庭的总数,结果显示母系家庭数量显著更多(p = 0.038)。与姑姨/叔伯的性别比相比,受影响的侄女/侄子中的女性与男性的性别比更高(0.00042)。
这一观察结果独立地证实了先前关于多发性硬化症(MS)易感性中“母系起源亲本”效应的发现。这些发现突出了叔伯侄配对所能带来的特殊贡献。这些未充分利用的配对可以比较受影响的姑姨 - 叔伯、未受影响的传递亲本以及受影响后代的性别的传递情况。在寻找起源亲本效应的疾病中,这种策略可能特别有用。这些发现还独立地证实了女性中MS发病率的上升,表明家族性病例与一般MS人群受相同环境因素的影响。