Sarcoidosis is associated with a truncating splice site mutation in BTNL2

R Valentonyte, J Hampe, K Huse, P Rosenstiel… - Nature …, 2005 - nature.com
R Valentonyte, J Hampe, K Huse, P Rosenstiel, M Albrecht, A Stenzel, M Nagy, KI Gaede
Nature genetics, 2005nature.com
Sarcoidosis is a polygenic immune disorder with predominant manifestation in the lung.
Genome-wide linkage analysis previously indicated that the extended major
histocompatibility locus on chromosome 6p was linked to susceptibility to sarcoidosis. Here,
we carried out a systematic three-stage SNP scan of 16.4 Mb on chromosome 6p21 in as
many as 947 independent cases of familial and sporadic sarcoidosis and found that a 15-kb
segment of the gene butyrophilin-like 2 (BTNL2) was associated with the disease. The …
Abstract
Sarcoidosis is a polygenic immune disorder with predominant manifestation in the lung. Genome-wide linkage analysis previously indicated that the extended major histocompatibility locus on chromosome 6p was linked to susceptibility to sarcoidosis. Here, we carried out a systematic three-stage SNP scan of 16.4 Mb on chromosome 6p21 in as many as 947 independent cases of familial and sporadic sarcoidosis and found that a 15-kb segment of the gene butyrophilin-like 2 (BTNL2) was associated with the disease. The primary disease-associated variant (rs2076530; PTDT = 3 × 10−6, Pcase-control = 1.1 × 10−8; replication PTDT = 0.0018, Pcase-control = 1.8 × 10−6) represents a risk factor that is independent of variation in HLA-DRB1. BTNL2 is a member of the immunoglobulin superfamily and has been implicated as a costimulatory molecule involved in T-cell activation on the basis of its homology to B7-1. The G → A transition constituting rs2076530 leads to the use of a cryptic splice site located 4 bp upstream of the affected wild-type donor site. Transcripts of the risk-associated allele have a premature stop in the spliced mRNA. The resulting protein lacks the C-terminal IgC domain and transmembrane helix, thereby disrupting the membrane localization of the protein, as shown in experiments using green fluorescent protein and V5 fusion proteins.
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