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Title: The T cell regulator gene SH2D2A contributes to the genetic susceptibility of multiple sclerosis. Author: Dai KZ, Harbo HF, Celius EG, Oturai A, Sørensen PS, Ryder LP, Datta P, Svejgaard A, Hillert J, Fredrikson S, Sandberg-Wollheim M, Laaksonen M, Myhr KM, Nyland H, Vartdal F, Spurkland A. Journal: Genes Immun; 2001 Aug; 2(5):263-8. PubMed ID: 11528519. Abstract: The T cell specific adapter protein (TSAd) encoded by the SH2D2A gene is involved in the control of T cell activation. The gene is located in the 1q21 region, which has been implicated in susceptibility to experimental allergic encephalomyelitis in the mouse. We therefore evaluated whether a polymorphic GA repeat (GA(13)-GA(33)) within the promoter region of the SH2D2A gene shows association to multiple sclerosis (MS). The frequency of the short alleles GA(13-16) was increased among 313 Norwegian MS patients compared to 277 healthy controls (0.332 vs 0.249, OR 1.5, Pc = 0.03). Transmission disequilibrium analysis in 146 Scandinavian families with at least two affected sibs showed increased transmission of GA(16) to MS patients. No linkage or association of MS to four genetic markers flanking the SH2D2A gene was observed. After activation of naive CD4(+) T cells, T cells homozygous for MS associated short alleles displayed lower level of TSAd ex vivo than T cells carrying at least one long allele, which were not associated to MS. Since the SH2D2A protein modulates T cell activation, this may be a mechanism for how short SH2D2A alleles confer susceptibility to develop MS.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]