An autosomal genome-wide screen for celiac disease in Bedouin families

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Abstract

Celiac disease is a common, familial autoimmune disease caused by exposure to gliadin in wheat, and related prolamins in barley and rye. The prevalence of the disease is approximately 1:133. Celiac disease can cause significant morbidity. The only treatment is a gluten-free diet. A genome-wide search of 405 microsatellite markers was performed on samples from 18 Bedouin families with a minimum of two cases of celiac disease. Non-parametric and parametric (including both dominant and recessive models of inheritance) linkage analyses were performed. The most significant genome-wide linkage evidence was at chromosome 3p26 with an HLod of 3.21, under the dominant model. The only other HLod or NPL greater than 2 was at 4q35, with an HLod of 2.15 under a dominant model. The region at 3p26, previously reported in two linkage analyses, harbors interleukin receptor genes, plausible candidates for celiac disease.

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Ding, Y. C., Weizman, Z., Yerushalmi, B., Elbedour, K., Garner, C. P., & Neuhausen, S. L. (2008). An autosomal genome-wide screen for celiac disease in Bedouin families. Genes and Immunity, 9(1), 81–86. https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.gene.6364439

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