High serum IFN-α activity is a heritable risk factor for systemic lupus erythematosus

TB Niewold, J Hua, TJA Lehman, JB Harley… - Genes & Immunity, 2007 - nature.com
TB Niewold, J Hua, TJA Lehman, JB Harley, MK Crow
Genes & Immunity, 2007nature.com
Interferon α (IFN-α) levels are elevated in many patients with systemic lupus erythematosus
(SLE); however it is not known whether high serum IFN-α activity is a cause or a result of the
disease. We studied 266 SLE patients and 405 of their healthy relatives, and frequently
found high serum IFN-α activity in both patients and healthy relatives as compared to healthy
unrelated individuals. High IFN-α activity was clustered in specific families in both SLE
patients and their healthy first-degree relatives, suggesting a heritable trait. Heritability was …
Abstract
Interferon α (IFN-α) levels are elevated in many patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE); however it is not known whether high serum IFN-α activity is a cause or a result of the disease. We studied 266 SLE patients and 405 of their healthy relatives, and frequently found high serum IFN-α activity in both patients and healthy relatives as compared to healthy unrelated individuals. High IFN-α activity was clustered in specific families in both SLE patients and their healthy first-degree relatives, suggesting a heritable trait. Heritability was also supported by quantitative familial correlation of IFN-α activity, concordance in affected sib pairs and frequent transmission of the high IFN-α activity trait from parents to offspring. Autoantibodies to RNA-binding proteins and double-stranded DNA were associated with high IFN-α activity in SLE patients; however these autoantibodies were very uncommon in healthy family members and did not explain the observed familial correlations. The frequency of high IFN-α activity was similar across all studied ethnic backgrounds. These data suggest that high serum IFN-α activity is a complex heritable trait, which plays a primary role in SLE pathogenesis.
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