Genetic Cause Discovered For Systemic Lupus Erythematosus
Main Category: LupusAlso Included In: Genetics
Article Date: 21 Sep 2007 - 0:00 PDT
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Mutations in a gene researchers call TREX1 is one cause for systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), a severe and incurable autoimmune disease. This is the result of a new study headed by Professor Norbert Hubner from the Max Delbrück Center for Molecular Medicine (MDC) Berlin-Buch and Dr. Min Ae Lee-Kirsch from the Technical University Dresden, (both in Germany) in collaboration with scientists from Finland, Sweden, the United Kingdom, and the USA. The study has now been published in the latest issue of Nature Genetics (Vol. 39, No. 9, pp. 1065-1067, 2007).
The exact causes for SLE are still unknown. Triggers are thought to include viruses, the sunlight, drug reactions, or a specific genetic predisposition. Symptoms of SLE can be inflammations of the skin, the joints, the heart, the lungs, the kidney, and the nervous system. The name of the disease refers to red spots on the skin which resemble the bites of a wolfe (latin: lupus). As the disease can affect any part of the body, it is "systemic". SLE belongs to the group of autoimmune diseases, because the body's immune system attacks its own healthy cells and tissues, causing inflammations. About 40,000 individuals are affected in Germany, most of them are women.
In a family suffering from a rare form of lupus, Dr. Lee Kirsch and Professor Hubner discovered various mutations in the gene TREX1. Hence, they wanted to know if mutations in TREX1 also play a role in SLE, the most common form of lupus. Collecting blood samples from patients with SLE from the UK, Germany, and Finland, the researcher compared them with samples from healthy individuals. As suspected, patients with SLE carried mutations in the TREX1 gene whereas healthy individuals did not. Nevertheless, the mutations found in TREX1 are not responsible for all types of SLE.
The product of the gene TREX1 is a protein which plays a role in apoptosis, a program in which cells literally induce their own death when defective. Thus, apoptosis protects the body from harm. Once apoptosis starts, TREX1 gets rid of its junctions in the cytoplasm and translocates into the nucleus of a damaged cell to digest its DNA.
Mutations in TREX1, however, change part of the protein with which it is chained to the cell's cytoplasm. In the case of apoptosis, TREX1 gets rid of its molecular chains, translocates into the cell's nucleus, and spreads to other parts of the cell too. The immune system seems to be mislead as it produces autoantibodies against these cell particles and also against other healthy cells. Why autoantibodies are produced still remains unclear. "Further studies will have to shed light onto this problem", stresses Professor Hübner.
MAX DELBRUECK CENTRE FOR MOLECULAR MEDICINE (MDC)
Robert-Roessle-Str. 10
Berlin - Buch
http://www.mdc-berlin.de
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MLA
14 Feb. 2012. <http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/83175.php>
APA
http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/releases/83175.php.
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Hope For Lupus Families
posted by mary mcdougall on 24 Sep 2007 at 3:02 pmThis research is welcome to families affected by lupus, where No GP, nor even rheumalotologists and psychiatrists are awake to the ravages of such a diverse and bewildering autoimmune disease. The symptoms are so systemic in so many parts of the body and mind. A lupus victim has to fight for recognition of symptons and diagnosis or no diagnosis can be so frustrating, particularly in the midst of ongoing, continuing almost numbing pain. It took me as a researcher (PhD) to work out what was the matter with me when for 3days in 1978, and 18 months in 2003-5, doctors had no idea. It has been a hard fight to get GP and specialists to recognize the problem. The next problem is to explain to my families why grandaughter may have had 3 miscarriages before 23, and niece to have lupus symptoms, and perhaps why father died at 57 on a kidney machine, lifelong psoriasis etc.
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