HLA、自身免疫和结节病Blau综合征一大亲缘分析。

S A Raphael, E B Blau, W H Zhang, S H Hsu
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引用次数: 58

摘要

目的:确定HLA和自身免疫是否与Blau综合征(家族性肉芽肿性关节炎、葡萄膜炎和皮疹)的发病机制有关,并评价这种疾病是否与结节病有关。设计:大型家庭调查。环境:威斯康星州绿湾的普通社区和宾夕法尼亚州费城的两个三级医疗中心。参与者:36名患有布劳综合症的家庭成员和配偶。选择程序:志愿者和方便样本。干预措施:没有。测量和结果:10名受影响和许多未受影响的受试者被亲自检查。审查了现有的医疗记录和以前的活组织检查报告和标本。2名受影响的受试者进行了皮肤活检,3名受影响的成人受试者用Kveim皮肤试验试剂进行了测试。对27名受影响和未受影响的受试者进行血清学和基因组I类和II类HLA分型。所有13名在世的受影响受试者和1名义务携带者进行了以下检测:抗核抗体滴度、类风湿因子、血清血管紧张素转换酶水平、IgG、IgM和IgA类的定量免疫球蛋白和临床化学特征。几例进行了全血细胞计数和红细胞沉降率检查。新确定4名受影响者、1名可能受影响者和1名义务携带者。手指和脚趾的屈曲挛缩(喜足趾)首次被发现是一种表型特征。在后代中观察到早期发病和症状恶化(预期)。共鉴定出16种HLA单倍型。没有确凿的证据表明这些单倍型与表型表达之间存在联系。然而,所有13名受影响的受试者都携带DR2 (DR beta 1*1501)和/或DR4 (DR beta 1*0401)等位基因。没有证据表明有高钙血症、高γ球蛋白血症M、类风湿因子产生或血细胞计数异常。2名患者进行了低滴度抗核抗体筛查试验,5名患者IgG和/或IgA水平轻度至中度升高,2名患者血清血管紧张素转换酶水平升高,3名患者红细胞沉降率轻度升高。三名受试者用Kveim皮肤试验试剂进行测试,目测无反应性。进行皮肤活检的两名受试者均有肉芽肿性炎症的证据。结论:本家族的疾病不同于经典结节病和早发结节病。自身免疫和全身性炎症的证据很少。camptodacyly应添加到综合征定义特征列表中。尽管HLA单倍型似乎不与受影响的受试者分离,但HLA- dr2和HLA- dr4亚型可能在表型表达中起允许作用。这个家族代表了一个独特的机会来定义在人类关节炎和葡萄膜炎开始参与的分子机制。遗传连锁研究,以确定布劳综合征基因的染色体位置正在进行中。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Analysis of a large kindred with Blau syndrome for HLA, autoimmunity, and sarcoidosis.

Objective: To determine whether HLA and autoimmunity contribute to the pathogenesis of Blau syndrome (familial granulomatous arthritis, uveitis, and rash) and evaluate whether this condition is related to sarcoidosis.

Design: Large family survey.

Setting: General community, Green Bay, Wis, and two tertiary care medical centers in Philadelphia, Pa.

Participants: Thirty-six family members and spouses from a large kindred with Blau syndrome.

Selection procedures: Volunteer and convenience sample.

Interventions: None.

Measurements and results: Ten affected and many unaffected subjects were personally examined. Medical records and previous biopsy reports and specimens, when available, were reviewed. Two affected subjects had skin biopsies performed and three affected adult subjects were tested with Kveim skin-test reagent. Serologic and genomic class I and class II HLA typing was performed on 27 affected and unaffected subjects. All 13 living affected subjects and the one obligate carrier had the following assays performed; antinuclear antibody titer, rheumatoid factor, serum angiotensin converting enzyme level, quantitative immunoglobulins of the IgG, IgM, and IgA classes, and clinical chemistry profiles. Several had complete blood cell counts and erythrocyte sedimentation rates performed. Four affected subjects, one possibly affected subject, and one obligate carrier were newly identified. Flexion contractures of the fingers and toes (camptodactyly) were found, for the first time, to be a phenotype characteristic. Earlier onset and worsening of symptoms in succeeding generations (anticipation) were observed. Sixteen HLA haplotypes were identified. No conclusive evidence for linkage between these haplotypes and phenotype expression could be demonstrated. All 13 affected subjects, however, carried the DR2 (DR beta 1*1501) and/or DR4 (DR beta 1*0401) allele. There was no evidence of hypercalcemia, hypergammaglobulinemia M, rheumatoid factor production, or abnormal blood cell counts. Two affected subjects had low-titer antinuclear antibody screening tests, five had mild to moderately elevated IgG and/or IgA levels, two had raised serum angiotensin converting enzyme levels, and three had mild elevation of the erythrocyte sedimentation rate. All three subjects tested with Kveim skin-test reagent showed no reactivity by visual inspection. Both subjects who had had skin biopsies performed had evidence of granulomatous inflammation.

Conclusions: This family's illness is distinct from both classic and early-onset sarcoidosis. There is minimal evidence for autoimmunity and systemic inflammation. Camptodactyly should be added to the list of syndrome-defining characteristics. Although HLA haplotypes do not appear to segregate with affected subjects, HLA-DR2 and HLA-DR4 subtypes may play a permissive role in phenotype expression. This family represents a unique opportunity to define the molecular mechanisms involved in the initiation of arthritis and uveitis in humans. Genetic linkage studies to determine the chromosomal location of the Blau syndrome gene are in progress.

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