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PHM142 Fall 2016 Coordinator: Dr. Jeffrey Henderson Instructor: Dr. David Hampson Multiple Sclerosis Genes Sarah To Ying Amy Zhao Hui (Lily) Zhou Multiple Sclerosis • Autoimmune disorder • Destruction of myelin → lesions on brain and spinal cord Causes of Multiple Sclerosis Pathophysiology of Multiple Sclerosis Environment • Geographic Location • Smoking • Exposure to Infectious Disease Genes • HLA genes • Non-HLA genes Genes of MS • Inheritance pattern unknown • Increased familial risk and heritability • Affect MS susceptibility, disease severity and other aspects of clinical phenotype • Interaction among multiple polymorphic genes → each increasing risk of MS by small factor HLA-DRB1 • Location: 6p21.32 • Found in class II subregion of the HLA complex • Responsible for producing beta chain of MHC class II molecules • MHC class II molecules expressed by APCs, present antigens to T cells • Polymorphic gene • Variants of HLA-DRB1 can interact to affect MS susceptibility HLA-DRB1 variants • HLA-DRB1*1501: main allele associated with MS susceptibility • Different allele combinations can increase or decrease risk of developing MS HLA-DRB1 and T cell Selection • HLA-DRB1 variants differ in amino acid sequence • Differences in peptide-antigen binding region can affect affinity of antigen binding • T cell development in thymus involves negative selection: T cells that react strongly to self antigen-MHC complexes eliminated • Unstable interaction between myelin antigen and MHC complex results in few complexes • T cells that react strongly to myelin antigen-MHC complex can escape negative selection if they do not encounter myelinantigen-MHC complexes in thymus Non-HLA genes • Genes in T-cell regulation • IL7RA, IL2RA • Genes affecting other cells of immune system • CLEC16A, TNF • Vitamin D metabolism • CYP2YB1 • Genes involved in neuronal surveillance and repair • KIP1b, GPC5 IL-7RA and IL-2RA • IL7RA and IL2RA code for the alpha chains of the interleukin2 receptor and interleukin-7 receptor • Important in promoting the growth and differentiation of lymphocytes • SNP significantly associated with MS IL-7RA • SNP location: rs6897932 within exon 6 (C to T -> Thr to Ile at position 244) • Reduction of splicing of exon 6 • Less production of soluble IL-7Rα, which inhibit IL-7 activity in CD8+ T cells • Decrease level of expression leads to decreased activation IL-2RA • Also known as CD25 • Main function: sensitization of activated T cells to IL-2 mediated proliferation • SNPs: rs12722489 and rs2104286 within the IL2RA gene • SNPs cause reduction of CD25 expression and thereby reducing its likelihood of activation • Loss in regulatory T cell confers MS susceptibility • Also related to type I diabetes Current and Further Research in MS genes • Ongoing research into genetic factors that affect MS and the mechanisms involved • Focus on identifying specific causative gene • Linkage disequilibrium makes it difficult to pinpoint causative gene from candidate genes • Determine if genetic variants associated with MS susceptibility also affect progression, severity, response to treatment Summary • HLA-DRB1 variants can interact to increase or decrease MS susceptibility • HLA-DRB1*1501 is the main HLA-DRB1 allele associated with MS susceptibility • Different MHC class II molecules resulting from HLA-DRB1 variants may bind to self-antigens with different affinities • Unstable self-antigen-MHC complexes may allow strongly autoreactive T cells to escape negative selection • IL-7RA and IL-2RA are two non-HLA MS linked genes that are associated with MS susceptibility • In IL-7RA, the identified SNP reduces splicing of exon 6, which reduces expression of the receptor and thereby reducing activation • In IL-2RA, the identified SNP reduces likelihood of activation and causes loss in regulatory T cells References Axisa, P., & Hafler, D. A. (2016, June). Multiple sclerosis: Genetics, biomarkers, treatments. Current Opinion in Neurology, 29(3), 345-353. doi:10.1097/WCO.0000000000000319 Barcellos, L. F., Oksenberg, J. R., Green, A. J., Bucher, P., Rimmler, J. B., Schmidt, S., . . . Hauser, S. L. (2002, January). Genetic basis for clinical expression in multiple sclerosis. Brain, 125(1), 150-158. doi:10.1093/brain/awf009 Goverman, J. M. (2011). Immune tolerance in multiple sclerosis. Immunological Reviews, 241(1), 228-240. doi:10.1111/j.1600065x.2011.01016.x HLA-DRB1 gene. (2016, November 8). Retrieved November 11, 2016, from https://ghr.nlm.nih.gov/gene/HLA-DRB1 Hoe, E., Mckay, F., Schibeci, S., Heard, R., Stewart, G., & Booth, D. (2010). Interleukin 7 Receptor Alpha Chain Haplotypes Vary in Their Influence on Multiple Sclerosis Susceptibility and Response to Interferon Beta. Journal of Interferon & Cytokine Research, 30(5), 291-298. doi:10.1089/jir.2009.0060 Hoppenbrouwers, I. A., & Hintzen, R. Q. (2011, February). Genetics of multiple sclerosis. Biochimica Et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Molecular Basis of Disease, 1812(2), 194-201. doi:10.1016/j.bbadis.2010.09.017 Ramagopalan, S. V., & Ebers, G. C. (2009). Multiple sclerosis: Major histocompatibility complexity and antigen presentation. Genome Medicine Genome Med, 1(11), 105. doi:10.1186/gm105 Schmidt, H., Williamson, D., & Ashley-Koch, A. (2007). HLA-DR15 Haplotype and Multiple Sclerosis: A HuGE Review. American Journal of Epidemiology, 165(10), 1097-1109. doi:10.1093/aje/kwk118