Multiple Sclerosis Research Today is a free monthly online journal that collates and summarizes the latest research about Multiple Sclerosis, including details on diagnosis, symptoms, treatment, prognosis. | ||||||||
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A genome scan in a single pedigree with a high prevalence of multiple sclerosis.Dyment DA, Cader MZ, Herrera BM, Ramagopalan SV, Orton SM, Chao M, Willer CJ, Sadovnick AD, Risch N, Ebers GC The Wellcome Trust Centre for Human Genetics, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK. BACKGROUND: Multiple sclerosis (MS) is a disease that is widely believed to be autoimmune in nature. Genetic-epidemiological studies implicate susceptibility genes in the pathogenesis of MS, although non-MHC susceptibility linkages have been difficult to confirm. Insight into pathways that are intrinsic to other complex diseases has come from the genetic analysis of large, autosomal-dominant kindreds. Here, we present a genetic study of a large and unique kindred in which MS appears to follow an autosomal-dominant pattern of inheritance, with consistent penetrance in four generations. METHODS: Eighty-two individuals of this 370-member family were genotyped with 681 microsatellite markers spanning the genome, with an average spacing of 5.3 cM. RESULTS: Parametric linkage analysis was performed and no significant LOD score (LOD >3.3) was observed. For a rare dominant disease model with reduced penetrance, 99.6% of the genome was excluded at a LOD score <-1 and 96% at a LOD score <-2. The HLA-DRB1 candidate gene was also genotyped by allele-specific methods. In each instance where at least one parent was positive for HLA-DRB1*15, one or more HLA-DRB1*15 alleles were transmitted to the affected offspring (11/11). HLA-DRB1*15 was transmitted equally from both the familial and the married-in parents and therefore this locus does not appear to be an autosomal-dominant acting gene in this family but an important modifier of risk. CONCLUSIONS: These results further stress the importance of the HLA-DRB1*15-bearing haplotype in determining MS susceptibility. Furthermore, this study highlights the complexity of MS genetics, even in the presence of a single family, seemingly segregating MS as an autosomal-dominant trait. Published 18 January 2008 in J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry, 79(2): 158-62.
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