ImmunoChip Study Implicates Antigen Presentation to T Cells in Narcolepsy

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Abstract

Recent advances in the identification of susceptibility genes and environmental exposures provide broad support for a post-infectious autoimmune basis for narcolepsy/hypocretin (orexin) deficiency. We genotyped loci associated with other autoimmune and inflammatory diseases in 1,886 individuals with hypocretin-deficient narcolepsy and 10,421 controls, all of European ancestry, using a custom genotyping array (ImmunoChip). Three loci located outside the Human Leukocyte Antigen (HLA) region on chromosome 6 were significantly associated with disease risk. In addition to a strong signal in the T cell receptor alpha (TRA@), variants in two additional narcolepsy loci, Cathepsin H (CTSH) and Tumor necrosis factor (ligand) superfamily member 4 (TNFSF4, also called OX40L), attained genome-wide significance. These findings underline the importance of antigen presentation by HLA Class II to T cells in the pathophysiology of this autoimmune disease. © 2013 Faraco et al.

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Faraco, J., Lin, L., Kornum, B. R., Kenny, E. E., Trynka, G., Einen, M., … Mignot, E. (2013). ImmunoChip Study Implicates Antigen Presentation to T Cells in Narcolepsy. PLoS Genetics, 9(2). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1003270

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