Novel gene variants associated with cardiovascular disease in systemic lupus erythematosus and rheumatoid arthritis

系统性红斑狼疮和类风湿性关节炎中与心血管疾病相关的新基因变异

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作者:Dag Leonard, Elisabet Svenungsson, Johanna Dahlqvist, Andrei Alexsson, Lisbeth Ärlestig, Kimberly E Taylor, Johanna K Sandling, Christine Bengtsson, Martina Frodlund, Andreas Jönsen, Susanna Eketjäll, Kerstin Jensen-Urstad, Iva Gunnarsson, Christopher Sjöwall, Anders A Bengtsson, Maija-Leena Elorant

Conclusions

The IL19 risk allele was associated with stroke/MI in SLE and RA, but not in the general population, indicating that shared immune pathways may be involved in the CVD pathogenesis in inflammatory rheumatic diseases.

Methods

Patients with SLE (n=1045) were genotyped using the 200K Immunochip SNP array (Illumina). The allele frequency was compared between patients with and without different manifestations of CVD.

Results

We identified two new putative risk loci associated with increased risk for CVD in two SLE populations, which remained after adjustment for traditional CVD risk factors. An IL19 risk allele, rs17581834(T) was associated with stroke/myocardial infarction (MI) in SLE (OR 2.3 (1.5 to 3.4), P=8.5×10-5) and RA (OR 2.8 (1.4 to 5.6), P=3.8×10-3), meta-analysis (OR 2.5 (2.0 to 2.9), P=3.5×10-7), but not in population controls. The IL19 risk allele affected protein binding, and SLE patients with the risk allele had increased levels of plasma-IL10 (P=0.004) and aPL (P=0.01). An SRP54-AS1 risk allele, rs799454(G) was associated with stroke/transient ischaemic attack in SLE (OR 1.7 (1.3 to 2.2), P=2.5×10-5) but not in RA. The SRP54-AS1 risk allele is an expression quantitative trait locus for four genes. Conclusions: The IL19 risk allele was associated with stroke/MI in SLE and RA, but not in the general population, indicating that shared immune pathways may be involved in the CVD pathogenesis in inflammatory rheumatic diseases.

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