免疫介质药物基因组学:TCL1A snp和雌激素依赖性炎症调节。

Journal of nature and science Pub Date : 2017-08-01
Ming-Fen Ho, Richard M Weinshilboum
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这篇综述描述了在芳香化酶抑制剂诱导的肌肉骨骼不良事件的药物基因组学研究中发现的TCL1A单核苷酸多态性(SNP)的重要功能意义,这些不良事件随后被证明以SNP和雌激素依赖的方式影响细胞因子、趋化因子、toll样受体(TLR)和NF-κB的表达。对这些snp的功能基因组研究发现了可能有助于疾病病理生理学的新机制,也可能增加我们对炎症介质表达调节的药物基因组学方面的理解。具体来说,雌激素以snp依赖的方式诱导TCL1A表达,从而对包括IL17RA、IL17A、CCR6、CCL20、TLR2、TLR7、TLR9、TLR10和NF-κB在内的免疫介质的表达产生下游影响。这些观察结果对类风湿关节炎等炎症性疾病有潜在的启示,类风湿关节炎的患者中有三分之二是女性。引人注目的是,这种基因组现象可以通过雌激素受体拮抗剂治疗“逆转”——同样以snp依赖的方式,即以药物基因组的方式。具体而言,雌激素受体阻断前后对雌激素受体结合雌激素反应元件的不同SNP依赖效应可能与TCL1A的SNP基因型和雌激素依赖调控及下游免疫介质表达的机制有关。此外,这种SNP和雌激素依赖的表型反应可以通过SERM治疗“逆转”。这些观察结果可能为理解、预测甚至以依赖snp的方式在药理学上操纵选定免疫介质的表达开辟了道路。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Immune Mediator Pharmacogenomics: TCL1A SNPs and Estrogen-Dependent Regulation of Inflammation.

This review describes the important functional implications of TCL1A single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) discovered during pharmacogenomic studies of aromatase inhibitor-induced musculoskeletal adverse events that were subsequently shown to influence the expression of cytokines, chemokines, toll-like receptors (TLR), and NF-κB in a SNP and estrogen-dependent fashion. Functional genomic studies of these SNPs led to the discovery of novel mechanisms that may contribute to disease pathophysiology and which may also increase our understanding of pharmacogenomic aspects of regulation of the expression of inflammatory mediators. Specifically, TCL1A expression was induced by estrogens in a SNP-dependent fashion, resulting in downstream effects on the expression of immune mediators that included IL17RA, IL17A, CCR6, CCL20 TLR2, TLR7, TLR9, TLR10 and NF-κB. These observations have potential implications for inflammatory diseases such as rheumatoid arthritis-a disease for which two thirds of patients are women. Strikingly, this genomic phenomenon could be "reversed" by estrogen receptor antagonist treatment-once again in a SNP-dependent, i.e., in a pharmacogenomic fashion. Specifically, differential SNP-dependent effects on estrogen receptor binding to estrogen response elements before and after estrogen receptor blockade might be associated with mechanisms underlying the SNP genotype and estrogen-dependent regulation of TCL1A and the expression of downstream immune mediators. Furthermore, this SNP and estrogen-dependent phenotypic response could be "reversed" by SERM treatment. These observations could potentially open the way to understand, predict and even pharmacologically manipulate the expression of selected immune mediators in a SNP-dependent fashion.

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