Common genetic susceptibility loci link PFAPA syndrome, Behçet’s disease, and recurrent aphthous stomatitis
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Published:2020-06-09
Issue:
Volume:
Page:202002051
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ISSN:0027-8424
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Container-title:Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Proc Natl Acad Sci USA
Author:
Manthiram KalpanaORCID, Preite Silvia, Dedeoglu Fatma, Demir SelcanORCID, Ozen SezaORCID, Edwards Kathryn M.ORCID, Lapidus SiviaORCID, Katz Alexander E.ORCID, Feder Henry M., Lawton Maranda, Licameli Greg R., Wright Peter F., Le Julie, Barron Karyl S.ORCID, Ombrello Amanda K., Barham Beverly, Romeo Tina, Jones Anne, Srinivasalu HemalathaORCID, Mudd Pamela A., DeBiasi Roberta L., Gül Ahmet, Marshall Gary S., Jones Olcay Y., Chandrasekharappa Settara C., Stepanovskiy Yuriy, Ferguson Polly J., Schwartzberg Pamela L., Remmers Elaine F., Kastner Daniel L.,
Abstract
Periodic fever, aphthous stomatitis, pharyngitis, and cervical adenitis (PFAPA) syndrome is the most common periodic fever syndrome in children. The disease appears to cluster in families, but the pathogenesis is unknown. We queried two European–American cohorts and one Turkish cohort (total n = 231) of individuals with PFAPA for common variants previously associated with two other oropharyngeal ulcerative disorders, Behçet’s disease and recurrent aphthous stomatitis. In a metaanalysis, we found that a variant upstream of IL12A (rs17753641) is strongly associated with PFAPA (OR 2.13, P = 6 × 10−9). We demonstrated that monocytes from individuals who are heterozygous or homozygous for this risk allele produce significantly higher levels of IL-12p70 upon IFN-γ and LPS stimulation than those from individuals without the risk allele. We also found that variants near STAT4, IL10, and CCR1-CCR3 were significant susceptibility loci for PFAPA, suggesting that the pathogenesis of PFAPA involves abnormal antigen-presenting cell function and T cell activity and polarization, thereby implicating both innate and adaptive immune responses at the oropharyngeal mucosa. Our results illustrate genetic similarities among recurrent aphthous stomatitis, PFAPA, and Behçet’s disease, placing these disorders on a common spectrum, with recurrent aphthous stomatitis on the mild end, Behçet’s disease on the severe end, and PFAPA intermediate. We propose naming these disorders Behçet’s spectrum disorders to highlight their relationship. HLA alleles may be factors that influence phenotypes along this spectrum as we found new class I and II HLA associations for PFAPA distinct from Behçet’s disease and recurrent aphthous stomatitis.
Funder
Division of Intramural Research, National Human Genome Research Institute Division of Intramural Research, National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases Department of Rheumatology, Boston, Children's Hospital The Childhood Arthritis and Rheumatology Research Alliance Private donation from family of child with PFAPA National Institutes of Health Director Challenge Fund Istanbul University Research Fund
Publisher
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Subject
Multidisciplinary
Cited by
60 articles.
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