Impact of CYBA genotypes on severity and progression of multiple sclerosis

CYBA 基因型对多发性硬化症严重程度和进展的影响

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作者:Andreas Törnell, Roberta Kiffin, Sara Haghighi, Natalia Mossberg, Oluf Andersen, Kristoffer Hellstrand, Anna Martner

Background and purpose

The NOX2 enzyme of myeloid cells generates reactive oxygen species (ROS) that have been implicated in the pathology of multiple sclerosis (MS). We aimed to determine the impact of genetic variation within CYBA, which encodes the functional CYBA/p22phox subunit of NOX2, on MS severity and progression.

Conclusions

These results implicate NOX2 in MS, in particular for the development of secondary progressive disease, and point toward NOX2-reductive therapy aiming to delay secondary progression.

Methods

One hundred three MS patients with up to 49 (median = 17) years follow-up time from first MS diagnosis were genotyped at the single nucleotide polymorphisms rs1049254 and rs4673 within CYBA.

Purpose

The NOX2 enzyme of myeloid cells generates reactive oxygen species (ROS) that have been implicated in the pathology of multiple sclerosis (MS). We aimed to determine the impact of genetic variation within CYBA, which encodes the functional CYBA/p22phox subunit of NOX2, on MS severity and progression.

Results

The rs1049254/G and rs4673/A CYBA alleles were associated with reduced formation of ROS and were thus defined as low-ROS alleles. Patients carrying low-ROS alleles showed reduced multiple sclerosis severity score (p = 0.02, N = 103, linear regression) and delayed onset of SPMS (p = 0.02, hazard ratio [HR] = 0.46, n = 100, log-rank test). In a cohort examined after 2005, patients carrying low-ROS CYBA alleles showed >20 years longer time to secondary progression (p = 0.003, HR = 0.29, n = 59, log-rank test). Conclusions: These results implicate NOX2 in MS, in particular for the development of secondary progressive disease, and point toward NOX2-reductive therapy aiming to delay secondary progression.

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