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CTLA4, SH2B3 and CLEC16A diversely affect the progression of early islet autoimmunity in relatives of type 1 diabetes patients

Authors :
Vandewalle, Julie
Desouter, Aster K
van der Auwera, Bart J
Tenoutasse, Sylvie
Gillard, Pieter
De Block, Christophe
Keymeulen, Bart
Gorus, Frans K
van de Casteele, Mark
Belgian, Diabetes Registry
Brussels Heritage Lab
Diabetes Clinic
Pathology/molecular and cellular medicine
Faculty of Medicine and Pharmacy
Diabetes Pathology & Therapy
Vriendenkring VUB
Belgian Diabetes Registry
Source :
Clinical and experimental immunology
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The HLA region is the major genetic risk determinant of Type 1 diabetes. How non-HLA loci contribute to the genetic risk is incompletely understood, but there are indications that at least some impact progression of asymptomatic autoimmunity. We examined whether SNPs in 7 susceptibility loci (INS, SH2B3, PTPN2, PTPN22, CTLA4, CLEC16A, and IL2RA) could improve prediction of the progression from single to multiple autoantibody positivity, and from there on to diagnosis. SNPs were genotyped in persistently autoantibody positive relatives by allelic discrimination qPCR and disease progression was studied by multivariate Cox regression analysis. In our cohort, only the CTLA4 GA genotype (rs3087243, P = 0.002) and the CLEC16A AA genotype (rs12708716, P = 0.021) were associated with accelerated progression from single to multiple autoantibody positivity, but their effects were restricted to presence of HLA-DQ2/DQ8, and IAA as first autoantibody, respectively. The interaction of CTLA4 and HLA-DQ2/DQ8 overruled the effect of DQ2/DQ8 alone. The HLA-DQ2/DQ8-mediated risk of progression to multiple autoantibodies nearly entirely depended on heterozygosity for CTLA4. The SH2B3 TT genotype (rs3184504) was protective for HLA-DQ8 positive subjects (P = 0.003). At the stage of multiple autoantibodies, only the CTLA4 GA genotype was a minor independent risk factor for progression towards clinical diabetes (P = 0.034). Our study shows that non-HLA polymorphisms impact progression of islet autoimmunity in a subgroup-, stage- and SNP-specific way, suggesting distinct mechanisms. If confirmed, these findings may help refine risk assessment, follow-up, and prevention trials in risk groups. The impact of HLA-DQ2/DQ8, the main genetic risk factor for accelerating progression from 1 to multiple autoantibodies, largely depended on CTLA4 status in the Belgian cohort.

Details

ISSN :
13652249 and 00099104
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Clinical and experimental immunology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8daffa225d86a28c942f01d361946414