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Allograft inflammatory factor-1 and tumor necrosis factor single nucleotide polymorphisms in systemic sclerosis
Journal article

Allograft inflammatory factor-1 and tumor necrosis factor single nucleotide polymorphisms in systemic sclerosis

F G Otieno, A M Lopez, S A Jimenez, J Gentiletti and C M Artlett
Tissue antigens, v 69(6), pp 583-591
Jun 2007
PMID: 17498268

Abstract

Scleroderma, Systemic - classification Humans Tumor Necrosis Factor-alpha - genetics Scleroderma, Systemic - genetics Rats Genotype Male DNA Primers - genetics Scleroderma, Systemic - immunology DNA-Binding Proteins - genetics Case-Control Studies Linkage Disequilibrium Homozygote Animals Base Sequence Alleles Female Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide
Tumor necrosis factor (TNF) alleles have been associated with systemic sclerosis (SSc); however, these alleles may be in linkage with other genes. Allograft inflammatory factor-1 (AIF-1) is a newly identified gene on the short arm of chromosome 6 in the class III region of the human leukocyte antigen. It appears to be involved in inflammation and was originally identified in rat cardiac allografts undergoing rejection. AIF-1 has several sequence variations (single nucleotide polymorphisms, SNPs), three of which result in nonsynonymous changes in amino acid coding. We analyzed the linkage of five TNFA and five AIF-1 SNPs by polymerase chain reaction in 239 Caucasian individuals. The TNFA-1031T/T genotype was found to be associated with SSc (P < 0.0001) and both the DcSSc (diffuse subset of SSc) and the LcSSc (limited subset of SSc) subsets (P= 0.0004 and P= 0.0009, respectively) and the TNFA-237G/G genotype was found to be associated with all SSc (P= 0.0003) and with the DcSSc and LcSSc subsets (P= 0.01 and P= 0.005, respectively). Furthermore, the TNFA-857C/T genotype was associated with LcSSc (P= 0.0003) and TNFA-307A/A genotype associated with DcSSc (P= 0.028). In AIF-1, RS2269475 exon 4A allele, which generates a nonsynonymous change (tryptophan to arginine), was significantly associated in patients with SSc (P= 0.0009) and was associated with those patients who had DcSSc (P= 0.002). A strong linkage disequilibrium was observed between the AIF-1 alleles, A allele of RS2269475 and the A allele of RS4711274 (P < 0.0001), and linkage was observed between AIF-1 and TNFA alleles. Here, we report a novel and significant association of a nonsynonymous change within the AIF-1 with SSc and identified the linkage with TNFA alleles within 50 kb of this gene. Our study lends support that TNFA may be an important inflammatory modulator in SSc and may play a significant role with AIF-1 in disease pathogenesis.

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Collaboration types
Domestic collaboration
Web of Science research areas
Cell Biology
Immunology
Pathology
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