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The Genealogist - UK census, BMDs and more online
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Autoimmune diseases and their causes
In the twenty first century, approximately 70% of cases of Addison's Disease are autoimmune in nature.
It has been known for some time that certain combinations of HLA groups (Human Leucocyte Antigen, otherwise known as white blood cell, groups) are found in a mathematically significant proportion of patients with Addison's Disease. ADNetwork has recently been sent a copy of an article found by a fellow sufferer of Addison's, who lives in Pittsburgh PA, USA, which she discovered on a reputable medical web site¹. The article, entitled 'Scientists Pinpoint Gene Behind Autoimmune Diseases' had recently been published in 'HealthDay News' by Amanda Gardner, HealthDay Reporter and is in the public domain. This article reports the discovery of a specific gene which appears responsible, when triggered, for a number of autoimmune diseases. It also reports the possibility that progress in medical science could eventually find a way to switch that specific genetic trigger back off, thus curing those autoimmune diseases.
Being already in the public domain, we have great pleasure in reproducing below the article in full as reported by Amanda Gardner. We acknowledge the copyright of the writers and publishers of the article.......
Scientists Pinpoint Gene Behind Autoimmune Diseases.
By Amanda Gardner
WEDNESDAY, March 21 (HealthDay News) -- Variations in one specific gene appear to be behind several different autoimmune and auto-inflammatory diseases.
The pinpointed region of chromosome 17, called NALP1, could be a new target for treatment, said the authors of a study in the March 22 issue of the New England Journal of Medicine.
"This part of the immune system may respond to triggers coming from the environment, like bacteria or viruses, and there are indications that you can turn it off. So, we're very, very hopeful that there may be drugs that allow us to do that," said the study's senior author, Dr. Richard A. Spritz, who directs the Human Medical Genetics Program at the University of Colorado at Denver and Health Sciences Center.
Spritz added, "That's not going to help people with childhood diabetes, where the damage is already complete. But, for a number of chronic autoimmune disorders, like lupus
Some 80 autoimmune and auto-inflammatory disorders, which occur when the immune system malfunctions and starts destroying normal tissue, affect between 15 million and 25 million people in the United States, particularly women.
A few of the autoimmune diseases are caused by mutations in single genes, but most appear to be more complex. Scientists suspect that some genes may predispose individuals to one or more diseases, whereas other genes may predispose individuals to autoimmune and auto-inflammatory diseases in general.
"There has been a feeling for decades that autoimmune diseases are somehow related," said Dr. Peter Gregersen, author of an accompanying editorial in the journal and director of the Robert S. Boas Center for Genomics and Human Genetics at the Feinstein Institute for Medical Research in Manhasset, N.Y.
Interactions between gene variants and environmental factors also play a role in triggering the onset of a disease.
Spritz and his colleagues have long focused on patients with vitiligo, a disorder in which pigment cells are destroyed, resulting in white patches on the skin and sometimes the hair. Individuals with vitiligo tend also to have other autoimmune and auto-inflammatory diseases, as do their relatives. But the combinations of diseases are not very consistent.
"They probably have genes that predispose more toward autoimmunity in general and not specific disorders," Spritz said.
The team did a systematic genetic analysis of 656 persons from 114 extended families in the United States and United Kingdom who had multiple autoimmune diseases, including vitiligo. This led them to a number of genetic possibilities, but the "hottest" signal was a region on chromosome 17, which had shown up previously as possibly harboring a lupus gene in families who also had vitiligo.
A closer examination revealed a collection of variations in a specific gene, NALP1.
"We don't really know which one causes the disease, but we can use the variations that we see as flags or markers of variations," Spritz explained. "These could be the ones that cause the disease or tell us about the ones that do."
But NALP1 is probably only part of the picture.
"This can't be the whole story," Spritz said. "This is one of probably many genes that predispose to autoimmunity, but it looks like it may be involved in a pretty big way, which is why we were able to find it."
The gene is connected to the body's primitive immune system, which is involved with the earliest responses to outside attacks.
"It probably has a big effect, and it probably interacts in some complex way with other genes and other risk factors," Spritz pointed out. "We know a lot about this gene. It was not an anonymous gene that you would have to start from ground zero studying. We know that it's part of the surveillance system for attack by bacteria or viruses, part of the innate immune system."
"This work is really nice and elegant, and it's also provocative," Gregersen said. "It raises the issue of whether this gene might be involved in more common disorders."
He added that the research was a good example of "a successful, family-based approach to gene identification and an example of how new genes identified that way can raise new connections among different diseases."
SOURCES: Richard A. Spritz M.D., director, Human Medical Genetics Program,
Reference:-
Article copyright © 2007 as detailed above.
HealthDay Reporter
and vitiligo, if you turn off the autoimmune process, the body could repair itself."
University of Colorado at Denver and Health Sciences Center, Aurora;
Peter K. Gregersen, M.D., director, Robert S. Boas Center for Genomics and Human Genetics, Feinstein Institute for Medical Research, North Shore Long Island Jewish Health System, Manhasset, N.Y., and professor of medicine and pathology, New York University School of Medicine, New York City;
March 22, 2007, New England Journal of Medicine
Copyright © 2007 ScoutNews, LLC. All rights reserved.
¹ www.MedicineNet.com
ADNetwork page layout copyright © 2007-2008 Mike Welch.