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Candidate Gene Study of TRAIL and TRAIL Receptors: Association with Response to Interferon Beta Therapy in Multiple Sclerosis Patients

TRAIL and TRAIL Receptor genes have been implicated in Multiple Sclerosis pathology as well as in the response to IFN beta therapy. The objective of our study was to evaluate the association of these genes in relation to the age at disease onset (AAO) and to the clinical response upon IFN beta treat...

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Autores principales: López-Gómez, Carlos, Pino-Ángeles, Almudena, Órpez-Zafra, Teresa, Pinto-Medel, María Jesús, Oliver-Martos, Begoña, Ortega-Pinazo, Jesús, Arnáiz, Carlos, Guijarro-Castro, Cristina, Varadé, Jezabel, Álvarez-Lafuente, Roberto, Urcelay, Elena, Sánchez-Jiménez, Francisca, Fernández, Óscar, Leyva, Laura
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3639207/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23658636
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0062540
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author López-Gómez, Carlos
Pino-Ángeles, Almudena
Órpez-Zafra, Teresa
Pinto-Medel, María Jesús
Oliver-Martos, Begoña
Ortega-Pinazo, Jesús
Arnáiz, Carlos
Guijarro-Castro, Cristina
Varadé, Jezabel
Álvarez-Lafuente, Roberto
Urcelay, Elena
Sánchez-Jiménez, Francisca
Fernández, Óscar
Leyva, Laura
author_facet López-Gómez, Carlos
Pino-Ángeles, Almudena
Órpez-Zafra, Teresa
Pinto-Medel, María Jesús
Oliver-Martos, Begoña
Ortega-Pinazo, Jesús
Arnáiz, Carlos
Guijarro-Castro, Cristina
Varadé, Jezabel
Álvarez-Lafuente, Roberto
Urcelay, Elena
Sánchez-Jiménez, Francisca
Fernández, Óscar
Leyva, Laura
author_sort López-Gómez, Carlos
collection PubMed
description TRAIL and TRAIL Receptor genes have been implicated in Multiple Sclerosis pathology as well as in the response to IFN beta therapy. The objective of our study was to evaluate the association of these genes in relation to the age at disease onset (AAO) and to the clinical response upon IFN beta treatment in Spanish MS patients. We carried out a candidate gene study of TRAIL, TRAILR-1, TRAILR-2, TRAILR-3 and TRAILR-4 genes. A total of 54 SNPs were analysed in 509 MS patients under IFN beta treatment, and an additional cohort of 226 MS patients was used to validate the results. Associations of rs1047275 in TRAILR-2 and rs7011559 in TRAILR-4 genes with AAO under an additive model did not withstand Bonferroni correction. In contrast, patients with the TRAILR-1 rs20576-CC genotype showed a better clinical response to IFN beta therapy compared with patients carrying the A-allele (recessive model: p = 8.88×10(−4), p(c) = 0.048, OR = 0.30). This SNP resulted in a non synonymous substitution of Glutamic acid to Alanine in position 228 (E228A), a change previously associated with susceptibility to different cancer types and risk of metastases, suggesting a lack of functionality of TRAILR-1. In order to unravel how this amino acid change in TRAILR-1 would affect to death signal, we performed a molecular modelling with both alleles. Neither TRAIL binding sites in the receptor nor the expression levels of TRAILR-1 in peripheral blood mononuclear cell subsets (monocytes, CD4+ and CD8+ T cells) were modified, suggesting that this SNP may be altering the death signal by some other mechanism. These findings show a role for TRAILR-1 gene variations in the clinical outcome of IFN beta therapy that might have relevance as a biomarker to predict the response to IFN beta in MS.
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spelling pubmed-36392072013-05-08 Candidate Gene Study of TRAIL and TRAIL Receptors: Association with Response to Interferon Beta Therapy in Multiple Sclerosis Patients López-Gómez, Carlos Pino-Ángeles, Almudena Órpez-Zafra, Teresa Pinto-Medel, María Jesús Oliver-Martos, Begoña Ortega-Pinazo, Jesús Arnáiz, Carlos Guijarro-Castro, Cristina Varadé, Jezabel Álvarez-Lafuente, Roberto Urcelay, Elena Sánchez-Jiménez, Francisca Fernández, Óscar Leyva, Laura PLoS One Research Article TRAIL and TRAIL Receptor genes have been implicated in Multiple Sclerosis pathology as well as in the response to IFN beta therapy. The objective of our study was to evaluate the association of these genes in relation to the age at disease onset (AAO) and to the clinical response upon IFN beta treatment in Spanish MS patients. We carried out a candidate gene study of TRAIL, TRAILR-1, TRAILR-2, TRAILR-3 and TRAILR-4 genes. A total of 54 SNPs were analysed in 509 MS patients under IFN beta treatment, and an additional cohort of 226 MS patients was used to validate the results. Associations of rs1047275 in TRAILR-2 and rs7011559 in TRAILR-4 genes with AAO under an additive model did not withstand Bonferroni correction. In contrast, patients with the TRAILR-1 rs20576-CC genotype showed a better clinical response to IFN beta therapy compared with patients carrying the A-allele (recessive model: p = 8.88×10(−4), p(c) = 0.048, OR = 0.30). This SNP resulted in a non synonymous substitution of Glutamic acid to Alanine in position 228 (E228A), a change previously associated with susceptibility to different cancer types and risk of metastases, suggesting a lack of functionality of TRAILR-1. In order to unravel how this amino acid change in TRAILR-1 would affect to death signal, we performed a molecular modelling with both alleles. Neither TRAIL binding sites in the receptor nor the expression levels of TRAILR-1 in peripheral blood mononuclear cell subsets (monocytes, CD4+ and CD8+ T cells) were modified, suggesting that this SNP may be altering the death signal by some other mechanism. These findings show a role for TRAILR-1 gene variations in the clinical outcome of IFN beta therapy that might have relevance as a biomarker to predict the response to IFN beta in MS. Public Library of Science 2013-04-29 /pmc/articles/PMC3639207/ /pubmed/23658636 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0062540 Text en © 2013 López-Gómez et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
López-Gómez, Carlos
Pino-Ángeles, Almudena
Órpez-Zafra, Teresa
Pinto-Medel, María Jesús
Oliver-Martos, Begoña
Ortega-Pinazo, Jesús
Arnáiz, Carlos
Guijarro-Castro, Cristina
Varadé, Jezabel
Álvarez-Lafuente, Roberto
Urcelay, Elena
Sánchez-Jiménez, Francisca
Fernández, Óscar
Leyva, Laura
Candidate Gene Study of TRAIL and TRAIL Receptors: Association with Response to Interferon Beta Therapy in Multiple Sclerosis Patients
title Candidate Gene Study of TRAIL and TRAIL Receptors: Association with Response to Interferon Beta Therapy in Multiple Sclerosis Patients
title_full Candidate Gene Study of TRAIL and TRAIL Receptors: Association with Response to Interferon Beta Therapy in Multiple Sclerosis Patients
title_fullStr Candidate Gene Study of TRAIL and TRAIL Receptors: Association with Response to Interferon Beta Therapy in Multiple Sclerosis Patients
title_full_unstemmed Candidate Gene Study of TRAIL and TRAIL Receptors: Association with Response to Interferon Beta Therapy in Multiple Sclerosis Patients
title_short Candidate Gene Study of TRAIL and TRAIL Receptors: Association with Response to Interferon Beta Therapy in Multiple Sclerosis Patients
title_sort candidate gene study of trail and trail receptors: association with response to interferon beta therapy in multiple sclerosis patients
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3639207/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23658636
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0062540
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