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Review STAT4: genetics, mechanisms, and implications for autoimmunity. 2008
Korman BD, Kastner DL, Gregersen PK, Remmers EF. · National Institute of Arthritis, Musculoskeletal, and Skin Diseases, 9 Memorial Drive, NIH Building 9, Room 1W108, Bethesda, MD 20892, USA. · Curr Allergy Asthma Rep. · Pubmed #18682104 No free full text.
Abstract: Recent advances in genetics and technology have led to breakthroughs in understanding the genes that predispose individuals to autoimmune diseases. A common haplotype of the signal transducer and activator of transcription 4 (STAT4) gene has been shown to be associated with susceptibility to rheumatoid arthritis, systemic lupus erythematosus, and primary Sjögren's syndrome. STAT4 is a transcription factor that transduces interleukin-12, interleukin-23, and type 1 interferon cytokine signals in T cells and monocytes, leading to T-helper type 1 and T-helper type 17 differentiation, monocyte activation, and interferon-gamma production. Although the evidence for this association is very strong and well replicated, the exact mechanism by which polymorphisms in this gene lead to disease remains unknown. In concert with the identification of other disease-associated loci, elucidating how the variant form of STAT4 modulates immune function should lead to an improved understanding of the pathophysiology of autoimmunity.
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Review Genetic analysis of collagen-induced arthritis in rats: a polygenic model for rheumatoid arthritis predicts a common framework of cross-species inflammatory/autoimmune disease loci. 2001
Griffiths MM, Remmers EF. · Salt Lake City Veterans' Affairs Salt Lake City Health Care System, Department of Medicine, University of Utah School of Medicine, USA. · Immunol Rev. · Pubmed #12086311 No free full text.
Abstract: Collagen-induced arthritis (CIA) is a useful model for dissecting the genetic patterns underlying susceptibility to rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and related chronic/inflammatory autoimmune diseases. CIA exhibits three phenotypes characteristic of autoimmune disease pathogenesis: abnormal levels of immune reactivity to self antigens; chronic inflammation of target organs expressing that specific autoantigen; activation and direct participation of invading mononuclear cells and resident tissue fibroblasts in organ damage. Over 25 different quantitative trait loci (QTL) regulating arthritis severity and autoantibody in rats with CIA are mapped. QTL-congenic strains show that certain CIA-QTLs can modulate arthritis independently These monogenic models are proving to be highly informative for fine mapping and function studies, revealing gender effects and evidence of gene clusters. Recent genome scans of RA populations identified RA-susceptibility loci in chromosome regions homologous to rat chromosomal segments housing CIA-QTLs. Also, CIA-QTLs frequently co-localize with susceptibility QTLs mapped in other rat arthritis models induced with non-immunogenic adjuvant oils and/or in rat autoimmune models of multiple sclerosis and diabetes. Common autoimmunity genes and inflammation genes important to several human diseases are likely being detected in the various rat disease models. Continued dissection of the genetic underpinnings of rat arthritis models should provide candidate genes for investigation in human patients and lead to a clearer understanding of the complex genetics of RA.
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Review Genetic factors regulating experimental arthritis in mice and rats. 1999
Wilder RL, Remmers EF, Kawahito Y, Gulko PS, Cannon GW, Griffiths MM. · Inflammatory Joint Diseases Section, Arthritis Rheumatism Branch, National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases, Bethesda, Md., USA. · Curr Dir Autoimmun. · Pubmed #11791440 No free full text.
This publication has no abstract.
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Review Susceptibility to autoimmune disease and drug addiction in inbred rats. Are there mechanistic factors in common related to abnormalities in hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis and stress response function? 2000
Wilder RL, Griffiths MM, Cannon GW, Caspi R, Remmers EF. · Inflammatory Joint Diseases Section, Arthritis and Rheumatism Branch, National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases, National Institutes of Health, Bldg. 10, Room 9N240, Bethesda, Maryland 20892, USA. · Ann N Y Acad Sci. · Pubmed #11268408 No free full text.
Abstract: DA and LEW inbred rats are extraordinarily susceptible to a wide range of experimental autoimmune diseases. These diseases include rheumatoid arthritis models such as collagen-induced arthritis (CIA) and adjuvant-induced arthritis (AIA), multiple sclerosis models such as myelin-basic-protein (MBP)-induced experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (MBP-EAE), and autoimmune uveitis models such as retinal S antigen (SAG) and interphotoreceptor-retinoid-binding-protein (IRBP)-induced experimental autoimmune uveitis (SAG-EAU and IRBP-EAU, respectively). DA and LEW rats are also addiction-prone to various drugs of abuse, such as cocaine. Moreover, they exhibit a variety of behavioral and biochemical characteristics that appear to be related to their susceptibility to addiction. By contrast, F344 and BN rats show quite different phenotypes. They are relatively resistant to CIA, AIA, MBP-EAE, SAG-EAU, and IRBP-EAU, and they are relatively resistant to addiction. Interestingly, both DA and LEW rats, in contrast to F344 and BN rats, have abnormalities in hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis function. For example, circadian production of corticosteroids is very abnormal in DA and LEW rats; that is, they exhibit minimal circadian variation in corticosterone levels. Since corticosteroids potentially have significant influences on immune function and autoimmune disease susceptibility and may also influence sensitivity to drugs of abuse, we have begun to dissect genetic control of these various phenotypic differences, focusing initially on the regulation of autoimmune disease expression. Using genomewide scanning techniques involving F2 crosses of DA x F344 (CIA and AIA), DA x BN (CIA), and LEW x F344 [IRBP-EAU and streptococcal-cell-wall arthritis (SCWA)], we have identified, to date, 14 genomic regions [quantitative trait loci (QTL)] that regulate disease expression in these crosses. Development and analysis of QTL-congenic rats involving these loci are in progress and should permit us to address the relationships among autoimmune disease susceptibility, drug addiction, and HPA axis and stress response function. These initial data, however, indicate that the genetic control of the autoimmune disease traits is highly complex.
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Review Animal models of rheumatoid arthritis and related inflammation. 1999
Joe B, Griffiths MM, Remmers EF, Wilder RL. · Inflammatory Joint Diseases Section, Arthritis and Rheumatism Branch, National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases, National Institute of Health, Building 10, Room 9N240, 9000 Rockville Pike, Bethesda, MD 20892, USA. · Curr Rheumatol Rep. · Pubmed #11123028 No free full text.
Abstract: The major, extensively studied, experimentally-induced rat and mouse models of arthritis with features resembling rheumatoid arthritis are reviewed here. Etiopathogenetic studies that were recently published are emphasized. In summary, multiple triggering stimuli can induce disease in genetically-prone strains of inbred rats and mice. Multiple genetic loci, including both MHC and non-MHC, regulate disease expression in these animals. By comparison with other models of autoimmune disease, clustering of regulatory loci within and among species is increasingly becoming evident. At the cellular level, both innate and acquired immune systems are involved in the disease manifestations. At the molecular level, unbalanced chronic production of tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), interleukin (IL)-1, IL-6 and IL-12, as opposed to IL-4 and IL-10, is correlated with arthritis disease susceptibility and severity.
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Article REL, encoding a member of the NF-kappaB family of transcription factors, is a newly defined risk locus for rheumatoid arthritis. 2009
Gregersen PK, Amos CI, Lee AT, Lu Y, Remmers EF, Kastner DL, Seldin MF, Criswell LA, Plenge RM, Holers VM, Mikuls TR, Sokka T, Moreland LW, Bridges SL, Xie G, Begovich AB, Siminovitch KA. · The Feinstein Institute for Medical Research, North Shore-Long Island Jewish Health System, Manhasset, NY, USA. · Nat Genet. · Pubmed #19503088 No free full text.
Abstract: We conducted a genome-wide association study of rheumatoid arthritis in 2,418 cases and 4,504 controls from North America and identified an association at the REL locus, encoding c-Rel, on chromosome 2p13 (rs13031237, P = 6.01 x 10(-10)). Replication in independent case-control datasets comprising 2,604 cases and 2,882 controls confirmed this association, yielding an allelic OR = 1.25 (P = 3.08 x 10(-14)) for marker rs13031237 and an allelic OR = 1.21 (P = 2.60 x 10(-11)) for marker rs13017599 in the combined dataset. The combined dataset also provides definitive support for associations at both CTLA4 (rs231735; OR = 0.85; P = 6.25 x 10(-9)) and BLK (rs2736340; OR = 1.19; P = 5.69 x 10(-9)). c-Rel is an NF-kappaB family member with distinct functional properties in hematopoietic cells, and its association with rheumatoid arthritis suggests disease pathways that involve other recently identified rheumatoid arthritis susceptibility genes including CD40, TRAF1, TNFAIP3 and PRKCQ.
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Article Genetic risk factors for rheumatoid arthritis differ in Caucasian and Korean populations. 2009
Lee HS, Korman BD, Le JM, Kastner DL, Remmers EF, Gregersen PK, Bae SC. · Hanyang University College of Medicine and the Hospital for Rheumatic Diseases, Seoul, South Korea. · Arthritis Rheum. · Pubmed #19180477 No free full text.
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: Recent studies have identified a number of novel rheumatoid arthritis (RA) susceptibility loci in Caucasian populations. The aim of this study was to determine whether the genetic variants at 4q27, 6q23, CCL21, TRAF1/C5, and CD40 identified in Caucasians are also associated with RA in a Korean case-control collection. We also comprehensively evaluated the genetic variation within PTPN22, a well-established autoimmune disease-associated gene. METHODS: We designed an experiment to thoroughly evaluate the PTPN22 linkage disequilibrium region, using tag single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) and disease-associated SNPs at 5 RA-associated loci recently identified in Caucasians, in 1,128 Korean patients with RA and 1,022 ethnically matched control subjects. We also resequenced the PTPN22 gene to seek novel coding variants that might be contributing to disease in this population. RESULTS: None of the susceptibility loci identified in Caucasian patients with RA contributed significantly to disease in Koreans. Although tag SNPs covering the PTPN22 linkage disequilibrium block were polymorphic, they did not reveal any disease association, and resequencing did not identify any new common coding region variants in this population. The 6q23 and 4q27 SNPs assayed were nonpolymorphic in this population, and the TRAF1/C5, CD40, and CCL21 SNPs did not show any evidence for association with RA in this population of Korean patients. CONCLUSION: The genetic risk factors for RA are different in Caucasian and Korean patients. Although patients of different ethnic groups share the HLA region as a major genetic risk locus, most other genes shown to be significantly associated with disease in Caucasians appear not to play a role in Korean patients with RA.
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Article The chromosome 7q region association with rheumatoid arthritis in females in a British population is not replicated in a North American case-control series. 2009
Korman BD, Seldin MF, Taylor KE, Le JM, Lee AT, Plenge RM, Amos CI, Criswell LA, Gregersen PK, Kastner DL, Remmers EF. · National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases, NIH, Bethesda, Maryland 20892-1849, USA. · Arthritis Rheum. · Pubmed #19116934 No free full text.
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: The single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) rs11761231 on chromosome 7q has been reported to be sexually dimorphic marker for rheumatoid arthritis (RA) susceptibility in a British population. We sought to replicate this finding and to better characterize susceptibility alleles in the region in a North American population. METHODS: DNA from 2 North American collections of RA patients and controls (1,605 cases and 2,640 controls) was genotyped for rs11761231 and 16 additional chromosome 7q tag SNPs using Sequenom iPlex assays. Association tests were performed for each collection and also separately, contrasting male cases with male controls and female cases with female controls. Principal components analysis (EigenStrat) was used to determine association with RA before and after adjusting for population stratification in the subset of the samples for which there were whole-genome SNP data (772 cases and 1,213 controls). RESULTS: We failed to replicate an association of the 7q region with RA. Initially, rs11761231 showed evidence for association with RA in the North American Rheumatoid Arthritis Consortium (NARAC) collection (P=0.0073), and rs11765576 showed association with RA in both the NARAC (P=0.038) and RA replication (P = 0.0013) collections. These markers also exhibited sex differentiation. However, in the whole-genome subset, neither SNP showed significant association with RA after correction for population stratification. CONCLUSION: While 2 SNPs on chromosome 7q appeared to be associated with RA in a North American cohort, the significance of this finding did not withstand correction for population substructure. Our results emphasize the need to carefully account for population structure to avoid false-positive disease associations.
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Article Common variants at CD40 and other loci confer risk of rheumatoid arthritis. 2008
Raychaudhuri S, Remmers EF, Lee AT, Hackett R, Guiducci C, Burtt NP, Gianniny L, Korman BD, Padyukov L, Kurreeman FA, Chang M, Catanese JJ, Ding B, Wong S, van der Helm-van Mil AH, Neale BM, Coblyn J, Cui J, Tak PP, Wolbink GJ, Crusius JB, van der Horst-Bruinsma IE, Criswell LA, Amos CI, Seldin MF, Kastner DL, Ardlie KG, Alfredsson L, Costenbader KH, Altshuler D, Huizinga TW, Shadick NA, Weinblatt ME, de Vries N, Worthington J, Seielstad M, Toes RE, Karlson EW, Begovich AB, Klareskog L, Gregersen PK, Daly MJ, Plenge RM. · Program in Medical and Population Genetics, Broad Institute of Harvard and Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02142, USA. · Nat Genet. · Pubmed #18794853 No free full text.
Abstract: To identify rheumatoid arthritis risk loci in European populations, we conducted a meta-analysis of two published genome-wide association (GWA) studies totaling 3,393 cases and 12,462 controls. We genotyped 31 top-ranked SNPs not previously associated with rheumatoid arthritis in an independent replication of 3,929 autoantibody-positive rheumatoid arthritis cases and 5,807 matched controls from eight separate collections. We identified a common variant at the CD40 gene locus (rs4810485, P = 0.0032 replication, P = 8.2 x 10(-9) overall, OR = 0.87). Along with other associations near TRAF1 (refs. 2,3) and TNFAIP3 (refs. 4,5), this implies a central role for the CD40 signaling pathway in rheumatoid arthritis pathogenesis. We also identified association at the CCL21 gene locus (rs2812378, P = 0.00097 replication, P = 2.8 x 10(-7) overall), a gene involved in lymphocyte trafficking. Finally, we identified evidence of association at four additional gene loci: MMEL1-TNFRSF14 (rs3890745, P = 0.0035 replication, P = 1.1 x 10(-7) overall), CDK6 (rs42041, P = 0.010 replication, P = 4.0 x 10(-6) overall), PRKCQ (rs4750316, P = 0.0078 replication, P = 4.4 x 10(-6) overall), and KIF5A-PIP4K2C (rs1678542, P = 0.0026 replication, P = 8.8 x 10(-8) overall).
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Article Several regions in the major histocompatibility complex confer risk for anti-CCP-antibody positive rheumatoid arthritis, independent of the DRB1 locus. free! 2008
Lee HS, Lee AT, Criswell LA, Seldin MF, Amos CI, Carulli JP, Navarrete C, Remmers EF, Kastner DL, Plenge RM, Li W, Gregersen PK. · The Feinstein Institute for Medical Research, North Shore LIJ Health System, Manhasset, New York 11030, United States of America. · Mol Med. · Pubmed #18309376 links to free full text
Abstract: Recent evidence suggests that additional risk loci for RA are present in the major histocompatibility complex (MHC), independent of the class II HLA-DRB1 locus. We have now tested a total of 1,769 SNPs across 7.5Mb of the MHC located from 6p22.2 (26.03 Mb) to 6p21.32 (33.59 Mb) derived from the Illumina 550K Beadchip (Illumina, San Diego, CA, USA). For an initial analysis in the whole dataset (869 RA CCP + cases, 1,193 controls), the strongest association signal was observed in markers near the HLA-DRB1 locus, with additional evidence for association extending out into the Class I HLA region. To avoid confounding that may arise due to linkage disequilibrium with DRB1 alleles, we analyzed a subset of the data by matching cases and controls by DRB1 genotype (both alleles matched 1:1), yielding a set of 372 cases with 372 controls. This analysis revealed the presence of at least two regions of association with RA in the Class I region, independent of DRB1 genotype. SNP alleles found on the conserved A1-B8-DR3 (8.1) haplotype show the strongest evidence of positive association (P ~ 0.00005) clustered in the region around the HLA-C locus. In addition, we identified risk alleles that are not present on the 8.1 haplotype, with maximal association signals (P ~ 0.001-0.0027) located near the ZNF311 locus. This latter association is enriched in DRB1*0404 individuals. Finally, several additional association signals were found in the extreme centromeric portion of the MHC, in regions containing the DOB1, TAP2, DPB1, and COL11A2 genes. These data emphasize that further analysis of the MHC is likely to reveal genetic risk factors for rheumatoid arthritis that are independent of the DRB1 shared epitope alleles.
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Article Variant form of STAT4 is associated with primary Sjögren's syndrome. 2008
Korman BD, Alba MI, Le JM, Alevizos I, Smith JA, Nikolov NP, Kastner DL, Remmers EF, Illei GG. · Complex Disease Genetics Unit, Genetics and Genomics Branch, National Institute of Arthritis, Musculoskeletal, and Skin Diseases, Bethesda, MD 20892, USA. · Genes Immun. · Pubmed #18273036 No free full text.
Abstract: Single nucleotide polymorphisms in the STAT4 gene have recently been shown to be associated with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). Primary Sjögren's syndrome (pSS) is a related autoimmune disease thought to have a pathogenesis similar to these diseases. To test the hypothesis that the variant haplotype of STAT4 seen in RA and SLE is also associated with pSS, we genotyped rs7574865, the most strongly disease-associated SNP in the variant STAT4 haplotype, in 124 Caucasian pSS subjects and compared them to 1143 Caucasian controls. The disease-associated T allele was more common in chromosomes of the pSS patients (29.6%) than in controls (22.3%), leading to a P-value for association of 0.01. These results implicate polymorphisms in the STAT4 gene in the pathogenesis of pSS.
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Article Two independent alleles at 6q23 associated with risk of rheumatoid arthritis. free! 2007
Plenge RM, Cotsapas C, Davies L, Price AL, de Bakker PI, Maller J, Pe'er I, Burtt NP, Blumenstiel B, DeFelice M, Parkin M, Barry R, Winslow W, Healy C, Graham RR, Neale BM, Izmailova E, Roubenoff R, Parker AN, Glass R, Karlson EW, Maher N, Hafler DA, Lee DM, Seldin MF, Remmers EF, Lee AT, Padyukov L, Alfredsson L, Coblyn J, Weinblatt ME, Gabriel SB, Purcell S, Klareskog L, Gregersen PK, Shadick NA, Daly MJ, Altshuler D. · Program in Medical and Population Genetics, Broad Institute of Harvard and Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02142, USA. · Nat Genet. · Pubmed #17982456 links to free full text
Abstract: To identify susceptibility alleles associated with rheumatoid arthritis, we genotyped 397 individuals with rheumatoid arthritis for 116,204 SNPs and carried out an association analysis in comparison to publicly available genotype data for 1,211 related individuals from the Framingham Heart Study. After evaluating and adjusting for technical and population biases, we identified a SNP at 6q23 (rs10499194, approximately 150 kb from TNFAIP3 and OLIG3) that was reproducibly associated with rheumatoid arthritis both in the genome-wide association (GWA) scan and in 5,541 additional case-control samples (P = 10(-3), GWA scan; P < 10(-6), replication; P = 10(-9), combined). In a concurrent study, the Wellcome Trust Case Control Consortium (WTCCC) has reported strong association of rheumatoid arthritis susceptibility to a different SNP located 3.8 kb from rs10499194 (rs6920220; P = 5 x 10(-6) in WTCCC). We show that these two SNP associations are statistically independent, are each reproducible in the comparison of our data and WTCCC data, and define risk and protective haplotypes for rheumatoid arthritis at 6q23.
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Article Association of STAT4 with rheumatoid arthritis in the Korean population. free! 2007
Lee HS, Remmers EF, Le JM, Kastner DL, Bae SC, Gregersen PK. · The Feinstein Institute for Medical Research, North Shore Long Island Jewish Health System, Manhasset, New York 11030, USA. · Mol Med. · Pubmed #17932559 links to free full text
Abstract: A recent study in the North American White population has documented the association of a common STAT4 haplotype (tagged by rs7574865) with risk for rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and systemic lupus erythematosus. To replicate this finding in the Korean population, we performed a case-control association study. We genotyped 67 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) within the STAT1 and STAT4 regions in 1123 Korean patients with RA and 1008 ethnicity-matched controls. The most significant four risk SNPs (rs11889341, rs7574865, rs8179673, and rs10181656 located within the third intron of STAT4) among 67 SNPs are identical with those in the North American study. All four SNPs have modest risk for RA susceptibility (odds ratio 1.21-1.27). A common haplotype defined by these markers (TTCG) carries significant risk for RA in Koreans [34 percent versus 28 percent, P=0.0027, OR (95 percent CI)=1.33 (1.10-1.60)]. By logistic regression analysis, this haplotype is an independent risk factor in addition to the classical shared epitope alleles at the HLA-DRB1 locus. There were no significant associations with age of disease onset, radiographic progression, or serologic status using either allelic or haplotypic analysis. Unlike several other risk genes for RA such as PTPN22, PADI4, and FCRL3, a haplotype of the STAT4 gene shows consistent association with RA susceptibility across Whites and Asians, suggesting that this risk haplotype predates the divergence of the major racial groups.
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Article STAT4 and the risk of rheumatoid arthritis and systemic lupus erythematosus. free! 2007
Remmers EF, Plenge RM, Lee AT, Graham RR, Hom G, Behrens TW, de Bakker PI, Le JM, Lee HS, Batliwalla F, Li W, Masters SL, Booty MG, Carulli JP, Padyukov L, Alfredsson L, Klareskog L, Chen WV, Amos CI, Criswell LA, Seldin MF, Kastner DL, Gregersen PK. · National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases, Bethesda, MD, USA. · N Engl J Med. · Pubmed #17804842 links to free full text
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Rheumatoid arthritis is a chronic inflammatory disease with a substantial genetic component. Susceptibility to disease has been linked with a region on chromosome 2q. METHODS: We tested single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in and around 13 candidate genes within the previously linked chromosome 2q region for association with rheumatoid arthritis. We then performed fine mapping of the STAT1-STAT4 region in a total of 1620 case patients with established rheumatoid arthritis and 2635 controls, all from North America. Implicated SNPs were further tested in an independent case-control series of 1529 patients with early rheumatoid arthritis and 881 controls, all from Sweden, and in a total of 1039 case patients and 1248 controls from three series of patients with systemic lupus erythematosus. RESULTS: A SNP haplotype in the third intron of STAT4 was associated with susceptibility to both rheumatoid arthritis and systemic lupus erythematosus. The minor alleles of the haplotype-defining SNPs were present in 27% of chromosomes of patients with established rheumatoid arthritis, as compared with 22% of those of controls (for the SNP rs7574865, P=2.81x10(-7); odds ratio for having the risk allele in chromosomes of patients vs. those of controls, 1.32). The association was replicated in Swedish patients with recent-onset rheumatoid arthritis (P=0.02) and matched controls. The haplotype marked by rs7574865 was strongly associated with lupus, being present on 31% of chromosomes of case patients and 22% of those of controls (P=1.87x10(-9); odds ratio for having the risk allele in chromosomes of patients vs. those of controls, 1.55). Homozygosity of the risk allele, as compared with absence of the allele, was associated with a more than doubled risk for lupus and a 60% increased risk for rheumatoid arthritis. CONCLUSIONS: A haplotype of STAT4 is associated with increased risk for both rheumatoid arthritis and systemic lupus erythematosus, suggesting a shared pathway for these illnesses.
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Article TRAF1-C5 as a risk locus for rheumatoid arthritis--a genomewide study. free! 2007
Plenge RM, Seielstad M, Padyukov L, Lee AT, Remmers EF, Ding B, Liew A, Khalili H, Chandrasekaran A, Davies LR, Li W, Tan AK, Bonnard C, Ong RT, Thalamuthu A, Pettersson S, Liu C, Tian C, Chen WV, Carulli JP, Beckman EM, Altshuler D, Alfredsson L, Criswell LA, Amos CI, Seldin MF, Kastner DL, Klareskog L, Gregersen PK. · Broad Institute of Harvard and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, USA. · N Engl J Med. · Pubmed #17804836 links to free full text
Abstract: BACKGROUND: Rheumatoid arthritis has a complex mode of inheritance. Although HLA-DRB1 and PTPN22 are well-established susceptibility loci, other genes that confer a modest level of risk have been identified recently. We carried out a genomewide association analysis to identify additional genetic loci associated with an increased risk of rheumatoid arthritis. METHODS: We genotyped 317,503 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in a combined case-control study of 1522 case subjects with rheumatoid arthritis and 1850 matched control subjects. The patients were seropositive for autoantibodies against cyclic citrullinated peptide (CCP). We obtained samples from two data sets, the North American Rheumatoid Arthritis Consortium (NARAC) and the Swedish Epidemiological Investigation of Rheumatoid Arthritis (EIRA). Results from NARAC and EIRA for 297,086 SNPs that passed quality-control filters were combined with the use of Cochran-Mantel-Haenszel stratified analysis. SNPs showing a significant association with disease (P<1x10(-8)) were genotyped in an independent set of case subjects with anti-CCP-positive rheumatoid arthritis (485 from NARAC and 512 from EIRA) and in control subjects (1282 from NARAC and 495 from EIRA). RESULTS: We observed associations between disease and variants in the major-histocompatibility-complex locus, in PTPN22, and in a SNP (rs3761847) on chromosome 9 for all samples tested, the latter with an odds ratio of 1.32 (95% confidence interval, 1.23 to 1.42; P=4x10(-14)). The SNP is in linkage disequilibrium with two genes relevant to chronic inflammation: TRAF1 (encoding tumor necrosis factor receptor-associated factor 1) and C5 (encoding complement component 5). CONCLUSIONS: A common genetic variant at the TRAF1-C5 locus on chromosome 9 is associated with an increased risk of anti-CCP-positive rheumatoid arthritis.
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Article The functional -169T-->C single-nucleotide polymorphism in FCRL3 is not associated with rheumatoid arthritis in white North Americans. free! 2006
Hu X, Chang M, Saiki RK, Cargill MA, Begovich AB, Ardlie KG, Criswell LA, Seldin MF, Amos CI, Gregersen PK, Kastner DL, Remmers EF. · Celera Diagnostics, Alameda, CA. · Arthritis Rheum. · Pubmed #16508985 links to free full text
This publication has no abstract.
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Article Replication of putative candidate-gene associations with rheumatoid arthritis in >4,000 samples from North America and Sweden: association of susceptibility with PTPN22, CTLA4, and PADI4. free! 2005
Plenge RM, Padyukov L, Remmers EF, Purcell S, Lee AT, Karlson EW, Wolfe F, Kastner DL, Alfredsson L, Altshuler D, Gregersen PK, Klareskog L, Rioux JD. · Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard, Cambridge, MA, USA. · Am J Hum Genet. · Pubmed #16380915 links to free full text
Abstract: Candidate-gene association studies in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) have lead to encouraging yet apparently inconsistent results. One explanation for the inconsistency is insufficient power to detect modest effects in the context of a low prior probability of a true effect. To overcome this limitation, we selected alleles with an increased probability of a disease association, on the basis of a review of the literature on RA and other autoimmune diseases, and tested them for association with RA susceptibility in a sample collection powered to detect modest genetic effects. We tested 17 alleles from 14 genes in 2,370 RA cases and 1,757 controls from the North American Rheumatoid Arthritis Consortium (NARAC) and the Swedish Epidemiological Investigation of Rheumatoid Arthritis (EIRA) collections. We found strong evidence of an association of PTPN22 with the development of anti-citrulline antibody-positive RA (odds ratio [OR] 1.49; P=.00002), using previously untested EIRA samples. We provide support for an association of CTLA4 (CT60 allele, OR 1.23; P=.001) and PADI4 (PADI4_94, OR 1.24; P=.001) with the development of RA, but only in the NARAC cohort. The CTLA4 association is stronger in patients with RA from both cohorts who are seropositive for anti-citrulline antibodies (P=.0006). Exploration of our data set with clinically relevant subsets of RA reveals that PTPN22 is associated with an earlier age at disease onset (P=.004) and that PTPN22 has a stronger effect in males than in females (P=.03). A meta-analysis failed to demonstrate an association of the remaining alleles with RA susceptibility, suggesting that the previously published associations may represent false-positive results. Given the strong statistical power to replicate a true-positive association in this study, our results provide support for PTPN22, CTLA4, and PADI4 as RA susceptibility genes and demonstrate novel associations with clinically relevant subsets of RA.
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Article Regulation of anti-cyclic citrullinated peptide antibodies in rheumatoid arthritis: contrasting effects of HLA-DR3 and the shared epitope alleles. free! 2005
Irigoyen P, Lee AT, Wener MH, Li W, Kern M, Batliwalla F, Lum RF, Massarotti E, Weisman M, Bombardier C, Remmers EF, Kastner DL, Seldin MF, Criswell LA, Gregersen PK. · North Shore-Long Island Jewish Institute for Medical Research, Manhasset, New York 11030, USA. · Arthritis Rheum. · Pubmed #16320316 links to free full text
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To examine the association between HLA-DRB1 alleles and the production of anti-cyclic citrullinated peptide (anti-CCP) and rheumatoid factor (RF) autoantibodies in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA). METHODS: We studied 1,723 Caucasian RA patients enrolled in the North American Rheumatoid Arthritis Consortium (NARAC) family cohort and the Study of New Onset Rheumatoid Arthritis (SONORA) cohort. All patients were tested for anti-CCP antibodies (by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay), RF (by nephelometry), and HLA-DR genotype (by polymerase chain reaction and sequence-specific oligonucleotide hybridization). RESULTS: When controlled for the presence of RF, anti-CCP positivity was strongly associated with the HLA-DRB1 shared epitope (SE). In RF+ patients, the presence of the SE was very significantly associated with anti-CCP positivity, with an odds ratio (OR) of 5.8 and a 95% confidence interval (95% CI) of 4.1-8.3. This relationship was also seen in RF- patients (OR 3.1 [95% CI 1.8-5.3]). In contrast, RF positivity was not significantly associated with presence of the SE independently of anti-CCP antibodies. Strikingly, HLA-DRB1*03 was strongly associated with reduced anti-CCP titers, even after controlling for the presence of the SE and restricting the analysis to anti-CCP+ patients. HLA-DR3 was also associated with anti-CCP- RA in our population. CONCLUSION: The HLA-DRB1 SE is strongly associated with the production of anti-CCP antibodies, but not RF. In contrast, HLA-DR3 alleles are associated with anti-CCP- disease and with lower levels of anti-CCP antibodies, even when controlling for the SE. These data emphasize the complexity of the genetic effects of the major histocompatibility complex on the RA phenotype.
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Article Analysis of CARD15/NOD2 haplotypes fails to identify common variants associated with rheumatoid arthritis susceptibility. 2005
Addo A, Le J, Li W, Aksentijevich I, Balow J, Lee A, Gregersen PK, Kastner DL, Remmers EF. · Genetics and Genomics Branch, National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases, Bethesda, MD 20892-0908, USA. · Scand J Rheumatol. · Pubmed #16134725 No free full text.
Abstract: OBJECTIVES: The CARD15/NOD2 gene product plays an important role in host response to bacterial lipopolysaccharides and bacterial muramyl dipeptide via activation of NF-kappaB in monocytes. Mutations in CARD15 are associated with Crohn's disease (CD), a chronic inflammatory bowel disease. In this study we sought to determine whether CD-associated mutations or any common variants of this gene might contribute to susceptibility to another chronic inflammatory disease, rheumatoid arthritis (RA). METHODS: We genotyped 376 Caucasian RA cases and 376 ethnically matched healthy controls for three CD-associated CARD15 mutations. We also genotyped these 752 individuals for 12 common CARD15 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), determined the linkage disequilibrium structure of the gene, and compared the frequencies of the common CARD15 haplotypes in the RA cases and controls. RESULTS: None of the CD-associated mutations or the CARD15 SNPs was associated with susceptibility to RA. We also found no significant difference in the frequencies of any of the common haplotypes of the CARD15 gene in RA patients and controls. Our haplotype analysis was consistent with earlier observations that all three CD-associated variants independently arose on the same ancestral haplotype. CONCLUSIONS: These data suggest that CARD15 variants are not associated with RA susceptibility.
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Article The non-MHC quantitative trait locus Cia5 contains three major arthritis genes that differentially regulate disease severity, pannus formation, and joint damage in collagen- and pristane-induced arthritis. free! 2005
Brenner M, Meng HC, Yarlett NC, Joe B, Griffiths MM, Remmers EF, Wilder RL, Gulko PS. · Laboratory of Experimental Rheumatology, Robert S. Boas Center for Genomics and Human Genetics and Graduate School of Molecular Medicine, North Shore-Long Island Jewish (LIJ) Research Institute, Manhasset, NY 11030, USA. · J Immunol. · Pubmed #15944295 links to free full text
Abstract: Cia5 is a locus on rat chromosome 10 which regulates the severity of collagen- and pristane-induced arthritis (CIA and PIA). To refine the region toward positional identification, Cia5 subcongenic strains were generated and studied in PIA and CIA. The protective effect of the telomeric locus Cia5a was confirmed in both models. A second arthritis severity locus (Cia5d) was identified within the most centromeric portion of Cia5. DA.F344(Cia5d) rats had a significantly lower median arthritis severity index in PIA, but not in CIA, compared with DA. On histologic analyses DA.F344(Cia5a) and DA.F344(Cia5d) congenics with PIA preserved a nearly normal joint architecture compared with DA, including significant reduction in synovial hyperplasia, pannus, angiogenesis, inflammatory infiltration, bone and cartilage erosions. Cia5 and Cia5a synovial levels of IL-1beta mRNA were reduced. Although both DA.F344(Cia5) and DA.F344(Cia5a) rats were protected in CIA, the arthritis scores of DA.F344(Cia5) were significantly higher than those of DA.F344(Cia5a), suggesting the existence of a third locus where F344-derived alleles centromeric from Cia5a contribute to increased arthritis severity. The existence of the third locus was further supported by higher levels of autoantibodies against rat type II collagen in DA.F344(Cia5) congenics compared with DA.F344(Cia5a). Our results determined that Cia5 contains three major arthritis severity regulatory loci regulating central events in the pathogenesis of arthritis, and differentially influencing CIA and PIA. These loci are syntenic to regions on human chromosomes 17q and 5q implicated in the susceptibility to rheumatoid arthritis, suggesting that the identification of these genes will be relevant to human disease.
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Article The non-major histocompatibility complex quantitative trait locus Cia10 contains a major arthritis gene and regulates disease severity, pannus formation, and joint damage. free! 2005
Brenner M, Meng HC, Yarlett NC, Griffiths MM, Remmers EF, Wilder RL, Gulko PS. · Laboratory of Experimental Rheumatology, R.S. Boas Center for Genomics and Human Genetics, North Shore-Long Island Jewish Research Institute, 350 Community Drive, Manhasset, NY 11030, USA. · Arthritis Rheum. · Pubmed #15641042 links to free full text
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To construct rats congenic for the chromosome 2 arthritis-regulatory quantitative trait locus Cia10, originally identified in a (DA x ACI)F(2) intercross rat strain that had been assessed for collagen-induced arthritis (CIA), and to determine the effect of this congenic interval on arthritis severity, joint histologic structure, and cytokine transcription in rats with pristane-induced arthritis (PIA). METHODS: A 52.6-MB interval derived from the ACI (CIA- and PIA-resistant) strain and containing the Cia10 interval was introgressed into the DA (arthritis-susceptible) background through genotype-guided congenic breeding. Homozygous male and female DA.ACI(Cia10) congenic rats were studied for their susceptibility to and severity of PIA, and were compared with same-sex DA rats. Histologic analyses were done on hind paws collected on day 32 following the pristane injection. Levels of interleukin-1beta (IL-1beta) and tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNFalpha) messenger RNA (mRNA) were measured with real-time polymerase chain reaction on synovial tissues from day-32 ankles. RESULTS: Both male and female DA.ACI(Cia10) congenic rats developed a significantly milder form of arthritis, with a 95% and 92% reduction in the arthritis severity index compared with DA male and female controls, respectively (males P < or = 0.001 and females P = 0.003). DA.ACI(Cia10) congenic rat synovial tissue was more likely to preserve its normal histologic architecture, including minimal to no cartilage and bone erosions, synovial hyperplasia, and pannus formation, and reduced numbers of vessels (angiogenesis), when compared with DA synovial tissue. There was a 2.7- and 2.4-fold reduction in the amount of IL-1beta and TNFalpha mRNA, respectively, in the synovial tissue of DA.ACI(Cia10) congenic rats compared with DA rats. Sequencing analyses of complementary DNA for the Cia10-predicted candidate gene Ptpn8, the rat homolog of the rheumatoid arthritis (RA)-susceptibility gene PTPN22, revealed no polymorphisms between the DA and ACI strains. CONCLUSION: This study determined that Cia10 harbors a major autoimmune arthritis-regulatory gene. This gene regulates clinical disease severity, histologic damage, and the levels of at least two central proinflammatory cytokines. We are in the process of narrowing down the critical region for positional cloning of the Cia10 gene. The identification of this gene will provide novel targets or pathways for focused candidate-gene studies in RA.
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Article Localization of the mutation responsible for osteopetrosis in the op rat to a 1.5-cM genetic interval on rat chromosome 10: identification of positional candidate genes by radiation hybrid mapping. 2002
Dobbins DE, Joe B, Hashiramoto A, Salstrom JL, Dracheva S, Ge L, Wilder RL, Remmers EF. · Department of Anatomy, Physiology, and Genetics, Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, Bethesda, Maryland 20814-4799, USA. · J Bone Miner Res. · Pubmed #12369779 No free full text.
Abstract: Osteopetrosis is caused by a heterogenous group of bone diseases that result in an increase in skeletal mass because of inadequate osteoclastic bone resorption. In the op osteopetrotic rat, the disease has been linked to a single genetic locus located at the proximal end of rat chromosome 10. In this study, we identified a 1.5-cM genetic interval that contains the mutation. We then generated an improved radiation hybrid (RH) map of this region to identify potential functional and positional candidates for the op gene. Using the rat genome radiation hybrid panel, we mapped 57 markers including 24 genes (14 that have not yet been mapped in the rat) and 10 expressed sequence tag markers. Included in the mapped genes are several candidate genes that might significantly influence the biochemical pathways involved in osteopetrosis. These include genes involved in osteoclast differentiation, apoptosis, and the functional capabilities of mature osteoclasts to resorb bone. Further analysis of the genes and expressed transcripts mapped to this region may yield important insights into the multifactorial control of osteoclast function and the mechanisms of failed bone homeostasis in diseases such as osteopetrosis, osteoporosis, and rheumatoid arthritis in which failed bone homeostasis is an instigating or exacerbating circumstance of the disease process.
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Article Modulation of multiple experimental arthritis models by collagen-induced arthritis quantitative trait loci isolated in congenic rat lines: different effects of non-major histocompatibility complex quantitative trait loci in males and females. free! 2002
Remmers EF, Joe B, Griffiths MM, Dobbins DE, Dracheva SV, Hashiramoto A, Furuya T, Salstrom JL, Wang J, Gulko PS, Cannon GW, Wilder RL. · National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases, Bethesda, Maryland20892, USA. · Arthritis Rheum. · Pubmed #12209529 links to free full text
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: Collagen-induced arthritis (CIA) is a model of inflammatory arthritis with many similarities to rheumatoid arthritis (RA). We previously mapped in F(2) offspring of CIA-susceptible DA and CIA-resistant F344 rats, 5 quantitative trait loci (QTLs) for which F344 alleles were associated with reduced CIA severity. In the present study, we sought to characterize the independent arthritis-modulating effects of these 5 QTLs. METHODS: CIA-regulatory regions were transferred from the F344 genome to the DA background or vice versa by repeated backcrossing. The arthritis-modulating effects of the transferred alleles were determined by comparing the severity of experimentally induced arthritis in congenic rats with that in DA rats. RESULTS: Congenic lines with either the F344 major histocompatibility complex (MHC) on the DA background or the DA MHC on the F344 background were resistant to CIA, confirming both MHC and non-MHC contributions to the genetic regulation of CIA. F344 alleles at the Cia3 and Cia5 regions of chromosomes 4 and 10 reduced CIA severity relative to that observed in DA rats. F344 Cia4 and Cia6 regions of chromosomes 7 and 8 failed to significantly alter CIA severity. Arthritis-modifying effects of Cia4 and Cia6 were, however, detected in pristane-induced and/or Freund's incomplete adjuvant oil-induced arthritis. The arthritis-modifying effects of the non-MHC CIA-regulatory loci differed in males and females. CONCLUSION: These congenic lines confirmed the existence and location of genes that regulate the severity of experimental arthritis in rats. Mechanisms responsible for the sex-specificity of individual arthritis-regulatory loci may explain some of the sex differences observed in RA and other autoimmune diseases in humans.
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Article Evaluation of quantitative trait loci regulating severity of mycobacterial adjuvant-induced arthritis in monocongenic and polycongenic rats: identification of a new regulatory locus on rat chromosome 10 and evidence of overlap with rheumatoid arthritis susceptibility loci. 2002
Joe B, Cannon GW, Griffiths MM, Dobbins DE, Gulko PS, Wilder RL, Remmers EF. · National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases, NIH, Bethesda, Maryland 20892, USA. · Arthritis Rheum. · Pubmed #11953987 No free full text.
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the regulatory potential of genetic loci controlling Mycobacterium butyricum adjuvant-induced arthritis (Mbt-AIA) using mono- and polycongenic rats. METHODS: Of 4 quantitative trait loci (QTLs) that regulate Mbt-AIA, F344 alleles at 3 of these loci, Aia1, Aia2, and Aia3, are associated with lower arthritis severity, whereas F344 alleles at Aia4 are associated with greater arthritis severity. In this study, we constructed congenic lines by transferring 1 or more of the F344 genomic segments containing Aia1, Aia2, and Aia3 onto the DA genome. We comparatively evaluated their responses to Mbt-AIA with the responses of parental DA and F344 rats. RESULTS: Aia1, encompassing the rat major histocompatibility complex, reduced arthritis severity in monocongenic rats of both sexes. The arthritis-lowering effects of Aia2 and Aia3 were sex-influenced and were therefore observed in only males and only females, respectively. Polycongenic rats containing F344 genomic regions at Aia1, Aia2, and Aia3 developed Mbt-AIA of relatively greater severity than did F344 rats, implying that in DA and F344 rats, there could be other Mbt-AIA loci in addition to Aia1, Aia2, Aia3, and Aia4. To test the possibility that some of these Mbt-AIA-regulatory loci may colocalize with other arthritis QTLs, we evaluated Mbt-AIA in DA.F344 monocongenic rats containing collagen-induced arthritis QTLs. Cia5 (the QTL region on chromosome 10), but not Cia5a, Cia4, or Cia6, also regulated Mbt-AIA, and was named Aia5. CONCLUSION: F344 genomic regions at Aia1, Aia2, and Aia3 and the newly identified Aia5 contain genes that reduce Mbt-AIA severity in DA rats. These Mbt-AIA-regulatory loci overlap rheumatoid arthritis-susceptibility loci in humans.
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Article Genetic dissection of collagen-induced arthritis in Chromosome 10 quantitative trait locus speed congenic rats: evidence for more than one regulatory locus and sex influences. 2000
Joe B, Remmers EF, Dobbins DE, Salstrom JL, Furuya T, Dracheva S, Gulko PS, Cannon GW, Griffiths MM, Wilder RL. · Inflammatory Joint Diseases Section, Arthritis and Rheumatism Branch, National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases, NIH, Bethesda, MD 20892, USA. · Immunogenetics. · Pubmed #11003387 No free full text.
Abstract: Rat Chromosome 10 (RNO10) harbors Cia5, a non-MHC quantitative trait locus (QTL) that regulates the severity of type II collagen-induced arthritis (CIA) in DAxF344 and DAxBN F2 rats. CIA is an animal model with many features that resemble rheumatoid arthritis. To facilitate analysis of Cia5 independently of the other CIA regulatory loci on other chromosomes, DA recombinant QTL speed congenic rats, DA.F344(Cia5), were generated. These QTL congenic rats have a large chromosomal segment containing Cia5 (interval size < or =80.1 cM) from CIA-resistant F344 rats introgressed into their genome. Phenotypic analyses of these rats for susceptibility and severity of CIA confirmed that Cia5 is an important disease-modifying locus. CIA severity was significantly lower in the Cia5 congenic rats than in DA controls. We also generated DA Cia5 speed sub-congenic rats, DA.F344(Cia5a), which had a smaller segment of the F344 genome, Cia5a, comprising only the distal q-telomeric end (interval size < or = 22.5 cM) of Cia5, introgressed into their genome. DA.F344(Cia5a) sub-congenic rats also exhibited reduced CIA disease severity compared with the parental DA rats. The regulatory effects in both congenic strains were sex influenced. The disease-ameliorating effect of the larger fragment, Cia5, was greater in males than in females, but the effect of the smaller fragment, Cia5a, was greater in females. We also present an improved genetic linkage map covering the Cia5/Cia5a region, which we have integrated with two rat radiation hybrid maps. Comparative homology analysis of this genomic region with mouse and human chromosomes was also undertaken. Regulatory loci for multiple autoimmune/inflammatory diseases in rats (RNO10), mice (MMU11), and humans (HSA17 and HSA5q23-q31) map to chromosomal segments homologous to Cia5 and Cia5a.
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