首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


Two Functional Variants of IRF5 Influence the Development of Macular Edema in Patients with Non-Anterior Uveitis
Authors:Ana Márquez  María Carmen Cénit  Miguel Cordero-Coma  Norberto Ortego-Centeno  Alfredo Adán  Alejandro Fonollosa  David Díaz Valle  Esperanza Pato  Ricardo Blanco  Joaquín Ca?al  Manuel Díaz-Llopis  Enrique de Ramón  María José del Rio  José Luis García Serrano  Joseba Artaraz  José Manuel Martín-Villa  Víctor Lloren?   Marina Bego?a Gorro?o-Echebarría  Javier Martín
Abstract:

Objective

Interferon (IFN) signaling plays a crucial role in autoimmunity. Genetic variation in interferon regulatory factor 5 (IRF5), a major regulator of the type I interferon induction, has been associated with risk of developing several autoimmune diseases. In the current study we aimed to evaluate whether three sets of correlated IRF5 genetic variants, independently associated with SLE and with different functional roles, are involved in uveitis susceptibility and its clinical subphenotypes.

Methods

Three IRF5 polymorphisms, rs2004640, rs2070197 and rs10954213, representative of each group, were genotyped using TaqMan® allelic discrimination assays in a total of 263 non-anterior uveitis patients and 724 healthy controls of Spanish origin.

Results

A clear association between two of the three analyzed genetic variants, rs2004640 and rs10954213, and the absence of macular edema was observed in the case/control analysis (PFDR=5.07E-03, OR=1.48, CI 95%=1.14-1.92 and PFDR=3.37E-03, OR=1.54, CI 95%=1.19-2.01, respectively). Consistently, the subphenotype analysis accordingly with the presence/absence of this clinical condition also reached statistical significance (rs2004640: P=0.037, OR=0.69, CI 95%=0.48-0.98; rs10954213: P=0.030, OR=0.67, CI 95%=0.47-0.96), thus suggesting that both IRF5 genetic variants are specifically associated with the lack of macular edema in uveitis patients.

Conclusion

Our results clearly showed for the first time that two functional genetic variants of IRF5 may play a role in the development of macular edema in non-anterior uveitis patients. Identifying genetic markers for macular edema could lead to the possibility of developing novel treatments or preventive therapies.
Keywords:
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号