首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


The Length of the CTLA-4 Microsatellite (AT)N-Repeat Affects the Risk for Type 1 Diabetes: For the Swedish Childhood Diabetes Study Group
Abstract:CTLA-4 is important to down-regulating T cell responses and has been implicated in type 1 (insulin dependent) diabetes mellitus in both linkage and association studies. The aim of our study was to relate the polymorphic (AT)n microsatellite in the 3′ untranslated sequence of the CTLA-4 gene to diabetes risk. We studied 616 consecutively diagnosed 0-34 year-old Swedish patients and 502 matched controls by PCR-based genotyping to determine the length of the 3′-end (AT)n repeat region of the CTLA-4 gene and categorizing alleles as predominantly monomorphic short (S) or highly polymorphic (in length) long (L) alleles. The odds of type 1 diabetes of subjects with the L/L genotype was estimated to be 1.84 times that of subjects with the S/S genotype (95% CI 1.44-2.73, p=0.002). Further analysis of the long alleles, partitioned into intermediate (I) length and very long (VL) alleles, suggested that L alleles act recessively in conferring diabetes risk (p=0.0009). This study suggests that the 3′-end (AT)n repeat region of the CTLA-4 gene represents a recessive risk factor for type 1 diabetes
Keywords:autoimmunity  T cells  diabetes genes  diabetes mellitus  insulin-dependent diabetes  IDDM
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号