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1.
Thyroid associated ophthalmopathy (TAO) is an autoimmune disease involving the extra ocular muscles and surrounding orbital connective and adipose tissues. The mechanism for the link between ophthalmopathy and thyroid autoimmunity is unknown but current evidence favors an immune reaction against a thyroid and orbital tissue shared antigen such as the novel protein G2s, which is highly expressed in both eye muscles and thyroid, or the TSH receptor (TSHR). Earlier, we showed that serum antibodies against G2s were closely linked to ophthalmopathy. Although lymphocytic infiltration of the eye muscles is a pathologic feature of TAO, it is unclear whether the reaction is in the eye muscle fiber or the surrounding connective tissue. We tested for peripheral blood mononuclear cell sensitization to G2s fusion protein in patients with TAO, Graves' hyperthyroidism or Hashimoto's thyroiditis without evident ophthalmopathy and normal subjects. Results were expressed as counts per min (cpm) and as stimulation indices (SI). Although proliferation tests were positive in 23% of patients with TAO, overall, there were no significant differences between the four groups. Tests were also positive in four out of seven patients with Hashimoto's thyroiditis, suggesting that immune reactivity against G2s could be a marker of this progressive thyroid disorder. There was no significant correlation between T cell reactivity to G2s and serum antibodies against the same protein, measured in enzyme linked immunosorbent assay. Failure to demonstrate significant T lymphocyte sensitization to G2s in the majority of patients with TAO may reflect the small number of sensitized T cells expected to be circulating in the peripheral blood which could be overcome by testing cloned orbital T cells, as available. Another possibility is that the T cell epitope(s) is not present on the 141 amino acid fragment of G2s that we have so far cloned. The finding of positive T cell tests in a small proportion of patients with ophthalmopathy suggests that future studies using cloned orbital T cells and full length G2s, or its dominant epitope, are indicated.  相似文献   

2.
Thyroid associated ophthalmopathy (TAO) is an autoimmune disease involving the extra ocular muscles and surrounding orbital connective and adipose tissues. The mechanism for the link between ophthalmopathy and thyroid autoimmunity is unknown but current evidence favors an immune reaction against a thyroid and orbital tissue shared antigen such as the novel protein G2s, which is highly expressed in both eye muscles and thyroid, or the TSH receptor (TSHR). Earlier, we showed that serum antibodies against G2s were closely linked to ophthalmopathy. Although lymphocytic infiltration of the eye muscles is a pathologic feature of TAO, it is unclear whether the reaction is in the eye muscle fiber or the surrounding connective tissue. We tested for peripheral blood mononuclear cell sensitization to G2s fusion protein in patients with TAO, Graves' hyperthyroidism or Hashimoto's thyroiditis without evident ophthalmopathy and normal subjects. Results were expressed as counts per min (cpm) and as stimulation indices (SI). Although proliferation tests were positive in 23% of patients with TAO, overall, there were no significant differences between the four groups. Tests were also positive in four out of seven patients with Hashimoto's thyroiditis, suggesting that immune reactivity against G2s could be a marker of this progressive thyroid disorder. There was no significant correlation between T cell reactivity to G2s and serum antibodies against the same protein, measured in enzyme linked immunosorbent assay. Failure to demonstrate significant T lymphocyte sensitization to G2s in the majority of patients with TAO may reflect the small number of sensitized T cells expected to be circulating in the peripheral blood which could be overcome by testing cloned orbital T cells, as available. Another possibility is that the T cell epitope(s) is not present on the 141 amino acid fragment of G2s that we have so far cloned. The finding of positive T cell tests in a small proportion of patients with ophthalmopathy suggests that future studies using cloned orbital T cells and full length G2s, or its dominant epitope, are indicated.  相似文献   

3.
Thyroid-associated ophthalmopathy (TAO) is most likely to be a T cell-mediated disease, in which cytokines released in the extraocular muscles activate fibroblasts, increasing glycosaminoglycan production. The nature of the orbital antigen recognized by the infiltrating T cells is unclear, although it is possible that there is cross-reactivity between this and a thyroid autoantigen to explain the close association with thyroid autoimmunity. We have tested the ability of human and porcine eye muscle antigen preparations to stimulate proliferation of circulating T cells from healthy subjects and patients with TAO or Graves' disease without clinical TAO. Occasional responses were seen, particularly after depletion of CD8+ T cells, and two out of 10 TAO patients responded to eye muscle proteins of 25-50 kD after fractionation of antigens on gels and subsequent elution. There was no disease-specific response of T cells to R1, R14, D1 and 1D3, recombinant proteins identified from screening an eye muscle cDNA library with sera from patients with autoimmune thyroid disease. We have also found that interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) production by T cells from TAO patients was not stimulated by eye muscle membrane antigens or by 1D3. These results suggest that the frequency of circulating T cells responding to eye muscle antigens in TAO is low, and that several candidate orbital antigens, including the 64-kD protein 1D3, are unlikely to be important T cell autoantigens in this condition.  相似文献   

4.
We have identified several eye muscle antigens and studied the significance of the corresponding serum autoantibodies in patients with Graves' disease. Of these antigens, only calsequestrin is expressed more in eye muscle than other skeletal muscles, which could explain at least partly the specific involvement of eye muscle in patients with Graves' disease. Earlier, we found a modest relationship between anti-calsequestrin antibodies and ophthalmopathy, but in that study we used calsequestrin prepared from rabbit heart muscle and measured antibodies by immunoblotting. We have reinvestigated the prevalences of anti-calsequestrin antibodies in larger groups of well-characterized patients with thyroid autoimmunity with and without ophthalmopathy and control patients and healthy subjects, using standard enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay incorporating highly purified rabbit skeletal muscle calsequestrin, which has a 97% homology with human calsequestrin, as antigen. Anti-calsequestrin antibodies were detected in 78% of patients with active congestive ophthalmopathy, in 92% of those with active inflammation and eye muscle involvement, but in only 22% of patients with chronic, 'burnt out' disease. Tests were also positive in 5% of patients with Graves' hyperthyroidism without evident ophthalmopathy (two patients) and one patient with 'watery eyes' but no other clear signs of congestive ophthalmopathy and IgA nephropathy and no known thyroid disease, but in no patient with Hashimoto's thyroiditis, toxic nodular goitre, non-toxic multi-nodular goitre or diabetes, or age- and sex-matched healthy subjects. In serial studies of all 11 patients with Graves' hyperthyroidism who had active ophthalmopathy at the time of the first clinic visit, or developed eye signs during the first 6 months, and positive anti-calsequestrin antibodies in at least one sample, anti-calsequestrin antibodies correlated with the onset of ocular myopathy in six patients. Antibodies targeting calsequestrin appear to be specific markers for ophthalmopathy and sensitive indicators of the ocular myopathy subtype of ophthalmopathy in patients with thyroid autoimmunity. However, these results must be considered preliminary until a large prospective study of patients with newly diagnosed Graves' hyperthyroidism, in which serum levels of calsequestrin antibodies are correlated with clinical changes and orbital eye muscle and connective tissue/fat volumes, has been carried out.  相似文献   

5.
We have studied the clinical significance of cytotoxic antibodies against human eye muscle cells in patients with thyroid-associated ophthalmopathy (TAO). Eye muscle reactive antibodies were measured in an antibody-dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity (ADCC) assay. A positive test was defined as % specific lysis greater than the upper limit of normal, taken as the mean plus two standard deviations for normal subjects tested concurrently. As parameters of the severity of the ophthalmopathy we measured the degree of proptosis (mm), level of intraocular pressure (IOP) (mmHg) and American Thyroid Association classes (0-6). ADCC tests were positive in 21 out of 42 patients with TAO and in 8 out of 14 patients with Graves' disease without evident eye disease but in none of 12 normal subjects tested. In patients with TAO mean (+/- SE) IOP was significantly greater than that in patients with Graves' disease without apparent eye involvement for the primary position and for all gaze positions. There were significant positive correlations between levels of eye muscle reactive cytotoxic antibodies and the severity of the eye disease quantitated as American Thyroid Association classes 0-6, the IOP in the primary position and on downgaze, but not with the degree of proptosis. These results suggest that cytotoxic antibodies, as detected in ADCC, may play a role in the eye muscle damage of TAO and that their measurement may provide a useful clinical test.  相似文献   

6.
It is generally accepted that thyroid-associated ophthalmopathy (TAO) is an autoimmune disease of the eye muscle (EM) and the surrounding orbital connective tissue in which circulating antibodies play an important role. Antibodies against EM membrane proteins of 63-67kDa mol. wt. seem to be the best markers of ophthalmopathy in patients with autoimmune thyroid disease. We purified a 63 kDa EM protein using SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis technology and TAO patients' sera as probes, digested the protein with cyanogen bromide and sequenced immunoreactive peptides. We also screened a human EM library with a rabbit antiserum against 63-65 kDa proteins and affinity purified antibodies from a TAO patient's serum that reacted with a 55 kDa EM membrane protein. From partial sequence information and from DNA sequencing of positive cDNA clones, the protein was identified as calsequestrin, a 63 kDa calcium binding protein localized in the sarcoplasmic reticulum of the muscle fiber. As determined by Northern blotting, calsequestrin was expressed in EM and other skeletal muscle but not thyroid or fibroblasts. Calsequestrin is different from the "64 kDa protein", which has been identified as succinate dehydrogenase flavoprotein subunit, which has a corrected mol. wt. of 67 kDa. Serum antibodies against calsequestrin were found in 40% of patients with clinically active TAO, but in only 4% of those with stable eye disease, and in 5% of normal subjects, by immunoblotting. Although it is possible that autoimmunity against calsequestrin plays a role in the progressive EM damage that characterizes ophthalmopathy it is more likely that the antibodies are secondary to a reaction against some other cell membrane protein, such as the novel thyroid and eye muscle shared protein G2s or the TSH receptor.  相似文献   

7.
We have tested sera from patients with autoimmune thyroid disorders with or without ophthalmopathy for immunoreactivity, in a dot blot assay, against a recombinant 98 amino acid fragment of a cloned 64 kDa protein, D1, which is expressed in human eye muscle and thyroid, in the form of a Lac Z fusion protein. Tests were positive in 19 out of 40 patients with established thyroid-associated ophthalmopathy (TAO), in 12 out of 21 patients with Graves' hyperthyroidism (GH) without clinically evident ophthalmopathy, in 5 out of 10 patients with thyroid autoimmunity and lid retraction but no other signs of ophthalmopathy, in 4 out of 23 patients with Hashimoto's thyroiditis (HT) without evident ophthalmopathy and in 2 out of 18 patients with benign adenoma or multinodular goitre, but in only 2 out of 37 normal subjects tested. SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and Western blotting for an antibody reactive with a 64 kDa antigen in pig eye muscle membranes was also carried out on sera from patients with TAO and GH. While immunoblotting for antibodies reactive with a 64 kDa protein was more often positive in patients with TAO, in whom 58% had serum antibodies which reacted with a 64 kDa protein, this was not the case in patients with GH without eye signs in whom the prevalence of positive immunoblot tests was 35%. Overall there was a fairly close correlation between the two tests although there were many exceptions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

8.
To investigate the prevalence of antibody against rat eye muscle membrane antigen, as determined from SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and western blotting, in sera from patients with thyroid-associated ophthalmopathy (TAO), we quantitatively analyzed the binding activity with a rat eye muscle membrane 64 kDa protein using chromato-scanner. Eye muscle antibody activity was expressed as ratio of density of the 64 kDa band to that at 66 kDa found with all normal sera and phosphate buffered saline. The mean (+/- SD) eye muscle antibody activity was 2.7 +/- 2.7 in TAO (P < 0.01 v.s. normal), 1.5 +/- 1.7 in Graves' disease without evident eye disease, 1.6 +/- 2.5 in Hashimoto's thyroiditis and 0.45 +/- 0.26 in normal subjects. A positive band at 64 kDa was found in 71% of patients with TAO, 36% of those of Graves' disease without evident eye disease and in 35% of patients with Hashimoto's thyroiditis without eye disease. The prevalence of this antibody activity tended to correlate to the severity of ophthalmopathy. Furthermore, the level of eye muscle antibody activity decreased in parallel with the improvement of eye signs in two patients. Sera reactive with rat eye muscle membrane 64 kDa protein reacted also with a human eye muscle membrane 64 kDa protein but not with human thyroid, liver, spleen or pancreas membrane preparations. In conclusion, antibody to rat eye muscle membrane 64 kDa protein is present in TAO and may be a useful clinical marker of ophthalmopathy.  相似文献   

9.
While it is generally accepted that thyroid-associated ophthalmopathy (TAO), a progressive inflammatory disorder of the extraocular muscle and orbital connective tissue (OCT), is immunologically mediated the nature of the underlying abnormalities is poorly understood. Although there is considerable evidence for antibody-mediated immunity against both eye muscle (EM) and OCT antigens in TAO a role of cell-mediated immunity (CMI) has not been studied in detail. We have used a new sensitive test for CMI, the leukocyte procoagulant activity (LPCA) assay and tested blood leukocytes from patients with TAO and autoimmune thyroid disease (ATD) without evident ophthalmopathy for reactivity against pig eye muscle (PEM) and human thyroid and OCT membrane and soluble fractions. In some cases human EM fractions were also tested. Preparations of PEM membrane (PEMM) and human thyroid membrane induced a significant LPCA response in both groups of patients. PEM cytosol, human OCT membrane and cytosol and human spleen membrane did not evoke a significant response in either group of patients. There were significant positive correlations in patients with TAO between (i) LPCA in response to PEMM and that to human thyroid membrane and (ii) LPCA in response to human thyroid membrane and that to human EM membrane. In patients with TAO there were no significant associations between LPCA response to PEMM and the detection of serum antibodies to a 64 kDa EM membrane protein in immunoblotting, or between LPCA response to PEMM and the duration or severity of the ophthalmopathy or clinical evidence for eye muscle involvement. These findings confirm a role of cell-mediated immunity against eye muscle antigens in thyroid-associated ophthalmopathy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
11.
12.
We have demonstrated that there is an antibody related to extraocular muscle enlargement in autoimmune ophthalmopathy (Graves' ophthalmopathy, thyroid-associated correlated with orbital computed tomography (CT). This study was designed to identify the autoantigen and to determine whether there are common antigens among the extraocular muscle, the lacrimal gland, and the thyroid. We prepared a 100,000g sediment fraction of porcine extraocular muscle, lacrimal gland, thyroid, and human thyroid, followed by sodium dodecyl sulfate-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) and immunoblotting with sera from patients with Graves' disease, with or without ophthalmopathy, classified by symptoms and signs combined with orbital CT and normal controls. The results showed there was an approximately 55-kDa protein band which was recognized by the sera in 32.1% (9/28) of patients with autoimmune ophthalmopathy and in 47.3% (9/19) of patients with extraocular muscle enlargement demonstrated by orbital CT. It was significantly higher than the positive rates in patients without autoimmune ophthalmopathy and normal controls (15.8 and 11.1%, respectively, P < 0.025). However, there was no common antigen among the extraocular muscles, the lacrimal gland, and the thyroid. To further confirm this eye muscle-specific antigen, the approximately 55-kDa protein band was cut and solubilized from the nitrocellulose paper after SDS-PAGE, and electrophoretically transferred and used as an antigen in enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. The absorbance was significantly higher in patients with autoimmune ophthalmopathy than patients without ophthalmopathy (P < 0.005), and normal controls (P < 0.01). Our findings suggest that an approximately 55-kDa protein may be a possible antigen in the eye muscle related to autoimmune ophthalmopathy.  相似文献   

13.
The immunological basis for the ophthalmopathy associated with Graves’ hyperthyroidism is both poorly understood and controversial. The mechanism for its link with thyroid autoimmunity is unknown but likely to be due to autoimmunity against some thyroid and orbital tissue-shared antigen, such as the thyroid-stimulating hormone receptor, which is expressed on the orbital pre-adipocyte and extraocular muscle cell, or the putative ‘eye muscle cell membrane antigen’. Chronic upper-eyelid retraction, which sometimes occurs as a dominant feature of ophthalmopathy or as an isolated abnormality, is a common and related orbital disorder. Recent evidence that antibodies targeting the calcium-binding protein calsequestrin are specific and sensitive markers of eye muscle and upper-eyelid muscle damage has highlighted the need for diagnostic antibody tests in ophthalmopathy. In the context of this confusion, this review will address the nature of the autoimmune reactions in thyroid-associated ophthalmopathy, focusing on the eye muscle.  相似文献   

14.
Thyroid-associated ophthalmopathy (TAO) is a common yet poorly understood component of Graves' disease involving inflammation, congestion and soft tissue remodelling of the orbit. Unlike most autoimmune disorders, TAO has variable severity but follows a predictable course and is usually self-limited. The objective of this study was to investigate the phenotypic profile of peripheral blood mononuclear cells in euthyroid patients with TAO. The study was a prospective, consecutive analysis of the peripheral blood mononuclear cell phenotype in patients with TAO and normal controls. We demonstrate that the fraction of T cells expressing CD69, CD25 or CXCR4 is significantly greater in patients with TAO compared to control donors. In addition, the fraction of CD19(+) CD25(+) B cells is significantly greater. We did not find differences between the two groups of subjects in monocytes expressing these markers. There is a phenotypic shift in peripheral blood lymphocytes associated with TAO that appears durable and persists beyond the hyperthyroid phase of Graves' disease. These changes may support the immune reaction provoking orbital disease development.  相似文献   

15.
Antibodies which are cytotoxic to human eye muscle cells and orbital fibroblasts in antibody dependent cell-mediated cytotoxicity (ADCC) are routinely detected in the serum of patients with thyroid-associated ophthalmopathy (TAO). In the present study sera from patients with TAO, most of which were shown to be positive in ADCC against eye muscle cell targets, were tested for complement-mediated antibody-dependent cytotoxicity (CMAC) against human and pig eye muscle cells, human (abdominal) skeletal muscle cells and human orbital fibroblasts, in 51Cr release assays. Several different assay protocols and complement sources were used and patient and age, sex matched normal sera compared. In preliminary studies tests were always negative when eye muscle cells, other skeletal muscle cells, or orbital fibroblasts were used as targets, regardless of the complement source, or concentration, or assay conditions used. When larger numbers of patients and normals were tested in a single assay mean (+/- SE) % specific lysis for patients with TAO was not significantly different from that for normals for either eye muscle cells or other skeletal muscle cells and taking the upper limit of normal as mean + 2 SD for the normals, tests were positive in no patient with either target. On the other hand ADCC tests were positive in 57% of the same sera tested with the same eye muscle cell targets. When human thyroid cells were used as targets, tests were positive in 10 of the 14 patients tested and monoclonal antibodies, in enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay, reactive with eye muscle antigens gave positive lysis of eye muscle cells.2+ t  相似文献   

16.
Tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha plays a central role in the development of ophthalmopathy in patients with Graves' disease (GD). The aim of this study was to investigate the association of TNF promoter polymorphisms at positions -1031 (T-1031C), -863 (C-863A), -857 (C-857T), -308 (G-308A), and -238 (G-238A) with Graves' ophthalmopathy (GO). We studied the distribution of TNF and human leukocyte antigen (HLA) DRB1 alleles in 228 Polish white patients with GD, 106 of whom had ophthalmopathy (NOSPECS class > or = III) and 248 healthy subjects. TNF -308A and HLA-DRB1*03 alleles were significantly increased in patients with GD compared with healthy subjects. Stratification analysis revealed no independent association of -308A with GD when the DRB1*03 status was considered. Subdividing GD according to eye involvement revealed that the distribution of TNF promoter haplotypes differed significantly in patients with or without ophthalmopathy. The haplotype containing the -238A allele was absent in GO. The association of G-238A with GO was independent of DRB1 alleles. These results indicate that TNF G-308A is associated with susceptibility to GD (however, this association is not independent of HLA-DRB1*03) and that TNF G-238A is associated with the development of ophthalmopathy, suggesting that G-238A or a gene in linkage disequilibrium may be disease modifying in GD.  相似文献   

17.
We have tested for serum antibodies reactive with 1D, a recombinant 65-kDa human thyroid protein which is also expressed in eye muscle, in patients with thyroid autoimmunity and ophthalmopathy by immunofluorescence and SDS-polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis (SDS-PAGE) and Western blotting. We also measured antibodies to a 64-kDa pig eye muscle membrane protein which is identified by SDS-PAGE and Western blotting, correlating the two reactivities. While antibodies to 1D, expressed in Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cell membrane, were detected in approximately 40% of patients with ophthalmopathy, in both tests the greatest prevalence, by immunofluorescence, 73%, was demonstrated in patients with Graves' hyperthyroidism without clinically evident eye disease, although only 50% of these patients were positive in immunoblotting. When the two tests for anti-1D antibodies were compared, immunofluorescence appeared to be the more specific and immunoblotting appeared to be the more sensitive. The greatest prevalence of antibodies reactive with a 64-kDa pig eye muscle protein, 71%, was in patients with TAO of less than 1 year duration; tests were positive in 49% of patients with more chronic ophthalmopathy and in 50% of patients with Graves' hyperthyroidism without evident eye disease. Antibodies reactive with 1 D were detected in 17% of normals by immunofluorescence and 24% by immunoblots, while antibodies reactive with the 64-kDa pig eye muscle protein were detected in only 10% of the normal subjects tested. Lesser prevalences of antibodies to the two 64-kDa proteins in patients with established eye disease suggest that such antibodies may be an early abnormality in patients with Graves' hyperthyroidism who are predisposed to develop ophthalmopathy. Although the association was not close, reactivity against 1D by immunoblotting, but not immunofluorescence, was significantly correlated with reactivity to a 64-kDa eye muscle membrane protein by immunoblotting. On the other hand, when sera containing antibodies reactive with both 1D and the 64-kDa eye muscle protein were incubated with CHO (1D) cell membrane, reactivity against 1D was absorbed while that against the eye muscle protein was not. The precise relationship between the two 64-kDa proteins can only be clarified by cloning the 64-kDa protein from an eye muscle expression library and comparing the sequences with those of 1D.  相似文献   

18.
We have characterized the mononuclear cell infiltrate in the extraocular muscle of three patients with Graves' disease, using antibodies which permit staining of paraffin-embedded tissue. The majority of lymphocytes, occurring in foci or interstitially, were T cells, most of which stain for CD3 or with UCHL1. T cells few, if any, stained with SN130, directed against the CD45R determinant. This suggests that these lymphocytes comprise a recently activated population within which memory cells may reside. B cells were also found but were predominantly confined to focal aggregates, and in one patient lymphoid follicles were seen. The orbital fat and connective tissue from a further two patients contained very few infiltrating cells which were mainly UCHL1-positive. Eye muscle cells did not express Ia antigens but the interstitial cells between them were Ia-positive and the vascular endothelium in four of the five specimens also stained with Ia. These results indicate that Graves' ophthalmopathy is associated with T cell, and to a lesser extent B cell, responses against the retrobulbar tissues; the extraocular muscle interstitial cells, probably including fibroblasts, may be targets of activation resulting from this infiltration.  相似文献   

19.
The clinical significance of a circulating autoantibody against a recently identified soluble human eye muscle-derived antigen was studied in patients with Graves' ophthalmopathy and autoimmune thyroid disorders. Tests were positive in 73% of patients with Graves' ophthalmopathy, including six of seven with no associated thyroid disease (euthyroid Graves' disease). Tests were also positive in 27% of patients with hyperthyroidism but no clinically apparent eye disease, in 13% of patients with Hashimoto's thyroiditis without eye disease, in two of 12 patients with subacute thyroiditis, in one of 20 patients with nonimmunological thyroid disorders but in none of 39 normal subjects. There were significant positive correlations between serum levels of the antibody (expressed as a titre) and the severity of the eye muscle component quantified as an index as well as the duration of the eye disease. Antibodies were detected in three of five patients with only lid lag and state who subsequently developed active ophthalmopathy, in six of nine patients who developed eye disease after treatment of their hyperthyroidism and in one of eight first degree relatives of patients with Graves' ophthalmopathy. In addition three of the 12 patients with autoimmune thyroid disease without apparent eye involvement, but positive antibody tests, have developed ophthalmopathy since the time of testing. These findings suggest that tests for antibodies against a soluble human eye muscle antigen may be useful clinically as a diagnostic test and to predict the onset of eye disease in predisposed patients and subjects.  相似文献   

20.
Interleukin-6 (IL-6) may play an important role in the pathogenesis of Graves' ophthalmopathy (GO). The aim of this study was to analyze the association of IL-6 gene promoter polymorphism, at position - 174 (G --> C, termed as G-174C), which may affect IL-6 production, with the development of GO. The G-174C polymorphism was determined in 279 Polish-Caucasian patients with Graves' disease (GD), of which 108 had clinically evident ophthalmopathy (NOSPECS class III or higher) and 186 healthy Polish adults. In patients with GD, the frequencies of the C allele (45 vs 42%; P = 0.35) and C/C genotype (20 vs 15%; P = 0.13) were not significantly different compared to controls. Subdividing patients with GD for the presence of eye disease revealed that the C allele (44 vs 45%; P = 0.76) and C/C genotype (20 vs 20%; P = 0.92) were equally distributed in patients with or without ophthalmopathy. There was also no association between the G-174C polymorphism and the severity of eye changes. Finally, IL-6 genotypes were not associated with laboratory findings (thyroid volume, serum IL-6 and thyroid autoantibodies levels) in patients with GD at diagnosis. Our results suggest that G-174C polymorphism of the IL-6 gene does not contribute to the development and severity of GO.  相似文献   

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