Association analysis of the cytotoxic T lymphocyte antigen-4 (CTLA-4) and autoimmune regulator-1 (AIRE-1) genes in sporadic autoimmune Addison's disease
B. Vaidya et al., Association analysis of the cytotoxic T lymphocyte antigen-4 (CTLA-4) and autoimmune regulator-1 (AIRE-1) genes in sporadic autoimmune Addison's disease, J CLIN END, 85(2), 2000, pp. 688-691
Although autoimmune Addison's disease (AAD) may occur as a component of the
monogenic autoimmune polyendocrinopathy type 1 syndrome (APS1), it is most
commonly found as an isolated disorder or associated with the autoimmune p
olyendocrinopathy type 2 syndrome (APS2). It is Likely that sporadic (non-A
PS1) AAD is inherited as a complex trait; however, apart from the major his
tocompatibility complex, the susceptibility genes remain unknown. We have e
xamined polymorphisms at two non-major histocompatibility complex candidate
susceptibility loci in sporadic (non-APS1) AAD: the cytotoxic T lymphocyte
antigen-4 (CTLA-8) gene and the autoimmune regulator (AIRE-1) gene. DNA sa
mples from AAD subjects (n = 90) and local controls (n = 144 for CTLA-4; n
= 576 for AIRE-1) were analyzed for the CTLA-4A/G polymorphism in exon 1 of
the CTLA-8 gene and for the common mutant AZRE-1 allele (964del13) in Unit
ed Kingdom subjects with APS1, by using the restriction enzymes Bst71I and
BsrBI, respectively. There was an association of the G allele at CTLA-4A/G
in AAD subjects (P = 0.008 vs. controls), which was stronger in subjects wi
th AAD as it component of APS2 than in subjects with isolated AAD. In contr
ast, the mutant AIRE-1 964del13 allele was carried in one each of the 576 (
0.2%) control subjects and the 90 (1.1%) AAD subjects as a heterozygote (P
= 0.254, not significant), suggesting that this common AIRE-1 gene abnormal
ity does not have a major role in sporadic (non-APS 1) AAD.