A common CTLA4 haplotype associated with coeliac disease
journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-17, 08:07 authored by Hunt, KA, McGovern, DPB, Kumar, PJ, Ghosh, S, Travis, SPL, Walters, JRF, Jewell, DP, Playford, RJ, van Heel, DACoeliac disease is a common enteropathy with a strong inherited risk characterised by dietary wheat, rye and barley induced T-cell activation. Although there is replicated linkage to 2q33, results are inconsistent from association studies of the most promising candidate genes: the CD28/CTLA4/ICOS cluster. CTLA4 plays a key role in regulating T lymphocyte mediated inflammatory responses, and variants in the 3′ region influence development of diabetes and thyroid disease. We genotyped CTLA4 variants (- 1722 C/T, -658 T/C, -318 C/T, +49 A/G, +1822 C/T, CT60 A/G) to tag all common haplotypes (> 5% frequency) and an ICOS variant (IVS + 173 C/T) in 340 white UK Caucasian coeliac disease cases. Strict ascertainment criteria for coeliac cases required both villous atrophy at diagnosis and positive serology. In total, 973 healthy controls were available for SNP, and 705 for CTLA4 haplotype, based association analyses. Coeliac disease showed weak association with the CTLA4 + 1822T (P=0.019) and CT60 G (P=0.047) alleles. Strong association was seen with a common CTLA4 haplotype (P=0.00067, odds ratio 1.41) of frequency 32.7% in coeliac disease and 25.5% in healthy controls. A common CTLA4 haplotype shows strong association with coeliac disease, and contains multiple alleles reported to affect immunological function. Loss of tolerance to dietary antigens in coeliac disease may be mediated in part by heritable variants in co-signalling genes regulating T-cell responses. © 2005 Nature Publishing Group All rights reserved.
History
Publication title
European Journal of Human GeneticsVolume
13Issue
4Pagination
440-444ISSN
1018-4813Department/School
College Office - College of Health and MedicinePublisher
Nature Publishing GroupPlace of publication
Macmillan Building, 4 Crinan St, London, England, N1 9XwRepository Status
- Restricted
Socio-economic Objectives
Clinical health not elsewhere classifiedUsage metrics
Categories
Keywords
Licence
Exports
RefWorksRefWorks
BibTeXBibTeX
Ref. managerRef. manager
EndnoteEndnote
DataCiteDataCite
NLMNLM
DCDC