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Dissecting the heterogeneity of rheumatoid arthritis through linkage analysis of quantitative traits

โœ Scribed by Lindsey A. Criswell; Wei V. Chen; Damini Jawaheer; Raymond F. Lum; Mark H. Wener; Xiangjun Gu; Peter K. Gregersen; Christopher I. Amos


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2006
Tongue
English
Weight
173 KB
Volume
56
Category
Article
ISSN
0004-3591

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โœฆ Synopsis


Abstract

Objective

To dissect the heterogeneity of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) through linkage analysis of quantitative traits, specifically, IgM rheumatoid factor (IgMโ€RF) and antiโ€“cyclic citrullinated peptide (antiโ€CCP) autoantibody titers.

Methods

Subjects, 1,002 RA patients from 491 multiplex families recruited by the North American RA Consortium, were typed for 379 microsatellite markers. Antiโ€CCP titers were determined based on a secondโ€generation enzymeโ€linked immunosorbent assay, and IgMโ€RF levels were quantified by immunonephelometry. We used the Merlin statistical package to perform nonparametric quantitative trait linkage analysis.

Results

For each of the quantitative traits, evidence of linkage, with logarithm of odds (LOD) scores of >1.0, was found in 9 regions. For both traits, the strongest evidence of linkage was for marker D6S1629 on chromosome 6p (LOD 14.02 for antiโ€CCP and LOD 12.09 for RF). Six other regions with LOD scores of >1.0 overlapped between the 2 traits, on chromosomes 1p21.1, 5q15, 8p23.1, 16p12.1, 16q23.1, and 18q21.31. Evidence of linkage to antiโ€CCP titer but not to RF titer was found in 2 regions (chromosomes 9p21.3 and 10q21.1), and evidence of linkage to RF titer but not to antiโ€CCP titer was found in 2 regions (chromosomes 5p15.2 and 1q42.3). Several covariates were significantly associated with 1 or both traits, and linkage analysis exploring the covariate effects revealed striking effects of sex in modulating linkage signals for several chromosomal regions. For example, sex had a striking impact on the linkage results for both quantitative traits on chromosome 6p (P = 0.0007 for antiโ€CCP titer and P = 0.0012 for RF titer), suggesting a sexโ€“HLA region interaction.

Conclusion

Analysis of quantitative components of RA is a promising approach for dissecting the genetic heterogeneity of this complex disorder. These results highlight the potential importance of sex or other covariates that may modulate some of the genetic effects that influence the risk of specific disease manifestations.


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