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Query: UMLS:C0011854 (
type 1 diabetes
)
20,749
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Susceptibility to autoimmune insulin-dependent (type 1) diabetes mellitus is determined by a combination of environmental and genetic factors, which include variation in MHC genes on chromosome 6p21 (
IDDM1
) and the insulin gene on chromosome 11p15 (IDDM2). However, linkage to
IDDM1
and IDDM2 cannot explain the clustering of
type 1 diabetes
in families, and a role for other genes is inferred. In the present report we describe linkage and association of
type 1 diabetes
to the CTLA-4 gene (cytotoxic T lymphocyte associated-4) on chromosome 2q33 (designated
IDDM12
). CTLA-4 is a strong candidate gene for T cell-mediated autoimmune disease because it encodes a T cell receptor that mediates T cell apoptosis and is a vital negative regulator of T cell activation. In addition, we provide supporting evidence that CTLA-4 is associated with susceptibility to Graves' disease, another organ-specific autoimmune disease.
...
PMID:The CTLA-4 gene region of chromosome 2q33 is linked to, and associated with, type 1 diabetes. Belgian Diabetes Registry. 881 51
Genome-wide scans for linkage of chromosome regions to
type 1 diabetes
in affected sib pair families have revealed that the major susceptibility locus resides within the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) on chromosome 6p21 (lambda S = 2.4). It is recognized that the MHC contains multiple susceptibility loci (referred to collectively as
IDDM1
), including the class II antigen receptor genes, which control the major pathological feature of the disease: T-lymphocyte-mediated autoimmune destruction of the insulin-producing pancreatic beta cells. However, the MHC genes, and a second locus, the insulin gene minisatellite on chromosome 11p15 (IDDM2; lambda S = 1.25), cannot account for all of the observed clustering of disease in families (lambda S = 15), and the scans suggested the presence of other susceptibility loci scattered throughout the genome. There are four additional loci for which there is currently sufficient evidence from linkage and association studies to justify fine mapping experiments: IDDM4 (FGF3/11q13), IDDM5 (ESR/6q22), IDDM8 (D6S281/6q27) and
IDDM12
(CTLA-4/2q33). IDDM4, 5 and 8 were detected by genome scanning, and
IDDM12
by a candidate gene strategy. Seven other named loci are not discounted but remain to be replicated widely. Multiple susceptibility loci were expected as genome-wide scans of the mouse model of
type 1 diabetes
had shown that although the MHC is the major mouse locus, at least 13 genes unlinked to the MHC are involved in the development of disease. Genome-wide scans using 1000 affected sibpair families will be required to be confident that all genes with effects on familial clustering equivalent to the insulin gene locus (lambda S = 1.25) have been detected. The identification of aetiological determinants requires exclusion of hitchhiking polymorphisms in regions of linkage disequilibrium, as demonstrated for the MHC and the insulin gene loci, and functional studies implicating the disease-associated variant in pathogenesis. Ultimately, targeting of specific candidate mutations in mice by homologous recombination and replacement will be necessary to prove the primary role of any candidate mutation.
...
PMID:Panning for gold: genome-wide scanning for linkage in type 1 diabetes. 887 50
Linkage disequilibrium (association) analysis was used to evaluate a candidate region near the CTLA4/CD28 genes using a multi-ethnic collection of families with one or more children affected by
IDDM
. In the data set unique to this study (Spanish, French, Mexican-American, Chinese and Korean), the transmission/disequilibrium test (TDT) revealed a highly significant deviation for transmission of alleles at the (AT)n microsatellite marker in the 3' untranslated region (P = 0.002) and the A/G polymorphism in the first exon (P = 0.00002) of the CTLA4 gene. The overall evidence for transmission deviation of the CTLA4 A/G alleles is also highly significant (P = 0.00005) in the combined data set (669 multiplex and 357 simplex families) from this study and a previous report on families from USA, Italy, UK, Spain and Sardinia. Significant heterogeneity was observed in these data sets. The British, Sardinian and Chinese data sets did not show any deviation for the A/G polymorphism, while the Caucasian-American data set showed a weak transmission deviation. Strong deviation for transmission was seen in the three Mediterranean-European populations (Italian, Spanish and French) (P = 10(-5)), the Mexican-American population (P = 0.002) and the Korean population (P = 0.03). These results suggest that a true
IDDM
susceptibility locus (designated
IDDM12
) is located near CTLA4.
...
PMID:Insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) is associated with CTLA4 polymorphisms in multiple ethnic groups. 925 73
Genome-wide scans for linkage of chromosome regions to
type 1 diabetes
in affected sib pair families have revealed that the major susceptibility locus resides within the major histocompatibility complex (MHC) on chromosome 6p21 (lambda s = 2.5). It is recognised that the MHC contains multiple susceptibility loci (referred to collectively as
IDDM1
), including the class II antigen receptor genes, which control the major pathological feature of the disease: T lymphocyte-mediated autoimmune destruction of the insulin-producing pancreatic beta cells. However, the MHC genes, and a second locus, the insulin gene minisatellite on chromosome 11p15 (IDDM2; lambda s = 1.25), cannot account for all of the observed clustering of disease in families (lambda s = 15), and the scans suggested the presence of other susceptibility loci scattered throughout the genome. There are four additional loci for which there is currently sufficient evidence from linkage and association studies to justify fine mapping experiments: IDDM4 (FGF3/11q13), IDDM5 (ESR/6q22), IDDM8 (D6S281/6q27) and
IDDM12
(CTLA-4/2q33), IDDM4, 5 and 8 were detected by genome scanning, and
IDDM12
by a candidate gene strategy. The results suggest that the clustering of
type 1 diabetes
in families is due to the sharing of alleles at multiple loci, and that the as yet unidentified environmental factors are not causing clustering, but instead appear to influence the overall penetrance of genetically programmed susceptibility. The data are consistent with a polygenic threshold model for the inheritance of
type 1 diabetes
.
...
PMID:Genetics of type 1 diabetes. 929 67
Type 1 diabetes (insulin-dependent) is a multifactorial disease with polygenic susceptibility. The major genetic component (
IDDM1
) resides within the HLA region, but several non-HLA loci have been implicated in the genetic susceptibility. In the present study, we have analysed two such loci,
IDDM12
(CTLA4) on 2q33 and IDDM13 on 2q34, in Danish (n = 254) and Spanish (n = 39) type 1 diabetic multiplex families. No significant evidence of linkage of
IDDM12
was observed in any of the two studied data sets. However, when the present data were combined with previously published data, they strengthened the evidence of linkage at this locus, p = 0.00002. For the IDDM13 region, we found some positive evidence of linkage of the D2S137-D2S164-D2S1471 markers (p-values 0.007, 0.02, and 0.007, respectively) using transmission disequilibrium testing (TDT) and the Tsp version of the TDT. Importantly, random transmission of all tested alleles was observed in unaffected offspring (p > 0.3). Stratification for HLA (high risk and non-high risk genotypes) in the Danish families did not reveal heterogeneity at
IDDM12
or IDDM13. In conclusion, our data on an entirely new family data set did not support the existence of
IDDM12
as a
type 1 diabetes
susceptibility locus in the Danish population. In addition, we found support for evidence of linkage and association of the IDDM13/D2S137-D2S1471 region (approximately 3.5 cM) to
type 1 diabetes
, however, further studies are needed to substantiate this observation.
...
PMID:IDDM12 (CTLA4) on 2q33 and IDDM13 on 2q34 in genetic susceptibility to type 1 diabetes (insulin-dependent). 1059 67
Polymorphic markers within the CTLA4 gene on chromosome 2q33 have been shown to be associated with
type 1 diabetes
. Therefore, a gene responsible for the disease (
IDDM12
) most likely lies within a region of <1-2 cM of CTLA4. To define more precisely the
IDDM12
interval, we genotyped a multiethnic (U.S. Caucasian, Mexican-American, French, Spanish, Korean, and Chinese) collection of 178 simplex and 350 multiplex families for 10 polymorphic markers within a genomic interval of approximately 300 kb, which contains the candidate genes CTLA4 and CD28. The order of these markers (D2S346, CD28, GGAA19E07, D2S307, D2S72, CTLA4, D2S105, and GATA52A04) was determined by sequence tagged site content mapping of bacterial artificial chromosome (BAC) and yeast artificial chromosome (YAC) clones. The transmission disequilibrium test (TDT) analyses of our data revealed significant association/linkage with three markers within CTLA4 and two immediate flanking markers (D2S72 and D2S105) on each side of CTLA4 but not with more distant markers including the candidate gene CD28. Tsp analyses revealed significant association only with the three polymorphic markers within the CTLA4 gene. The markers linked and associated with
type 1 diabetes
are contained within a phagemid artificial chromosome clone of 100 kb, suggesting that the
IDDM12
locus is either CTLA4 or an unknown gene in very close proximity.
...
PMID:Genetic and physical mapping of a type 1 diabetes susceptibility gene (IDDM12) to a 100-kb phagemid artificial chromosome clone containing D2S72-CTLA4-D2S105 on chromosome 2q33. 1086 73
Several studies have demonstrated an association of CTLA4 (
IDDM12
) alanine-17 with
type 1 diabetes
, but CTLA4 variants have not yet been investigated in type 2 diabetes. The CTLA4 exon 1 polymorphism (49 A/G) was analyzed in 300 Caucasian patients with type 2 diabetes and 466 healthy controls. All patients were negative for glutamate decarboxylase and islet cell antibodies. CTLA4 alleles were defined by PCR, single-strand conformational polymorphism, and restriction length fragment polymorphism analysis using BBV:I. The distribution of alleles as well as the genotypic and phenotypic frequencies were similar among patients and controls [AA, 42 vs. 39%; AG, 47 vs. 46%; GG, 11 vs. 15%, P = not significant (n.s.); A/G, 65/35% vs. 62/38%, P = n.s.; alanine/threonine 92/58% vs. 85/61%, P = n.s.]. However, detailed analysis of clinical and biochemical parameters revealed a tendency of GG (alanine/alanine) toward younger age at disease manifestation (46.8 +/- 0.8 vs. 49.5 +/- 0.8 yr, mean +/- SEM), lower body mass index (21.4 +/- 0.5 vs. 24.4 +/- 0.5 kg/m(2), P = 0.042), and basal C-peptide level (0.33 +/- 0.07 vs. 0.53 +/- 0.07nmol/L), as well as earlier start of insulin treatment (5.8 +/- 1.2 vs. 8.7 +/- 0.6 yr) and higher portion of patients on insulin (71 vs. 61%). Patients with the AA genotype were significantly less likely to develop microangiopathic lesions (P < 0.0005). No differences were found for hypertension or family history of type 2 diabetes. In conclusion, CTLA4 alanine-17 does not represent a major risk factor for type 2 diabetes. Additional studies on larger groups and different ethnic groups are warranted to clarify the association of the GG genotype with faster ss-cell failure and the lower rate of microvascular complications in AA carriers.
...
PMID:The codon 17 polymorphism of the CTLA4 gene in type 2 diabetes mellitus. 1115 25
Type 1 diabetes (T1D) is a genetically complex disorder of glucose homeostasis that results from the autoimmune destruction of the insulin-secreting cells of the pancreas. Two previous whole-genome scans for linkage to T1D in 187 and 356 families containing affected sib pairs (ASPs) yielded apparently conflicting results, despite partial overlap in the families analyzed. However, each of these studies individually lacked power to detect loci with locus-specific disease prevalence/sib-risk ratios (lambda(s)) <1.4. In the present study, a third genome scan was performed using a new collection of 225 multiplex families with T1D, and the data from all three of these genome scans were merged and analyzed jointly. The combined sample of 831 ASPs, all with both parents genotyped, provided 90% power to detect linkage for loci with lambda(s) = 1.3 at P=7.4x10(-4). Three chromosome regions were identified that showed significant evidence of linkage (P<2.2x10(-5); LOD scores >4), 6p21 (
IDDM1
), 11p15 (IDDM2), 16q22-q24, and four more that showed suggestive evidence (P<7.4x10(-4), LOD scores > or =2.2), 10p11 (IDDM10), 2q31 (IDDM7,
IDDM12
, and IDDM13), 6q21 (IDDM15), and 1q42. Exploratory analyses, taking into account the presence of specific high-risk HLA genotypes or affected sibs' ages at disease onset, provided evidence of linkage at several additional sites, including the putative IDDM8 locus on chromosome 6q27. Our results indicate that much of the difficulty in mapping T1D susceptibility genes results from inadequate sample sizes, and the results point to the value of future international collaborations to assemble and analyze much larger data sets for linkage in complex diseases.
...
PMID:Seven regions of the genome show evidence of linkage to type 1 diabetes in a consensus analysis of 767 multiplex families. 1150 94
Susceptibility to insulin-dependent (type 1) diabetes mellitus is determined by both environmental and genetic factors. The primary gene associated with predisposition to
type 1 diabetes
is the human leukocyte antigen (HLA) class II gene (
IDDM1
). Recent studies have described linkage and association of
type 1 diabetes
to the cytotoxic T lymphocyte antigen-4 (CTLA-4) gene (
IDDM12
)in Caucasians. CTLA-4 is a candidate gene for T-cell-mediated autoimmune diseases because it is a negative regulator of T-cell proliferation. We investigated distribution of a CTLA-4 (AT)n microsatellite marker in 118 Japanese patients with
type 1 diabetes
and 195 control subjects. We also investigated association between this CTLA-4 gene polymorphism and GAD65 antibody positivity in 103 of the patients. CTLA-4 microsatellite marker loci were determined by polymerase chain reaction amplification of genomic DNA and resolution of the products on sequencing gels. GAD65 antibody was detected by radioligand binding assay. There was no significant difference in the distribution of CTLA-4 alleles between patients and controls, and no difference was observed in the prevalence of CTLA-4 alleles when GAD65 antibody-positive and -negative individuals with the
type 1 diabetes
were compared. The present study did not support an association between the CTLA-4 microsatellite marker and
type 1 diabetes
in our Japanese study population.
...
PMID:No association of type 1 diabetes with a microsatellite marker for CTLA-4 in a Japanese population. 1168 91
Co-stimulatory molecules of CD28, cytotoxic T lymphocyte-associated antigen-4 (CTLA-4), and the newly identified inducible co-stimulator (ICOS) are expressed on cell surfaces and provide regulatory signals for T-cell activation. Their genes are candidate susceptibility genes for
type 1 diabetes
because they co-localize to Chromosome 2q33 with the
IDDM12
locus. After determining the genomic structure and screening for polymorphisms of the ICOS gene, we performed association studies between newly identified polymorphisms of the ICOS gene, together with known polymorphisms of CD28 and CTLA-4 genes, and
type 1 diabetes
. The 49A/G dimorphism in exon 1 and the (AT)n in the 3' untranslated region of the CTLA-4 gene were significantly associated with
type 1 diabetes
. Evaluation of the CTLA-4 49A-3'(AT)n 86-bp haplotype frequency in patients and controls confirmed the results from the analysis of each polymorphic site. Dimorphism in intron 3 of the CD28 gene was associated with
type 1 diabetes
only in the early-onset group. In contrast, there was no association with the microsatellite polymorphisms in the ICOS gene or dimorphisms in the promotor region of CTLA-4. Of the three genes encoding co-stimulatory molecules, the CTLA-4 gene appears to confer risks for the development of
type 1 diabetes
.
...
PMID:Association studies of CTLA-4, CD28, and ICOS gene polymorphisms with type 1 diabetes in the Japanese population. 1168 55
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