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  • Title: Association of the MIC-A gene and HLA-B51 with Behçet's disease in Arabs and non-Ashkenazi Jews in Israel.
    Author: Cohen R, Metzger S, Nahir M, Chajek-Shaul T.
    Journal: Ann Rheum Dis; 2002 Feb; 61(2):157-60. PubMed ID: 11796403.
    Abstract:
    BACKGROUND: Behçet's disease is known to be strongly associated with HLA-B51 in many different ethnic groups. Recently, it was suggested that MIC-A (major histocompatibility complex class I related gene A) is the pathogenic gene after strong association was found between the MIC-A A6 allele of the transmembrane region and the disease in Japanese and Greek patients, although in Greek patients this association was found to be due to linkage disequilibrium with HLA-B51. OBJECTIVES: To investigate microsatellite polymorphism in Arab and non-Ashkenazi Jewish (NAJ) patients in Israel, to determine whether this association occurs in these groups with Behçet's disease, and elucidate the associated HLA allele of the disease. METHODS: Forty four Israeli patients with Behçet's disease, including 20 Arabs and 24 NAJ, and 130 ethnically matched healthy controls were examined for MIC-A microsatellite polymorphism of the transmembrane region using polymerase chain reaction, autoradiography, and sequence analysis. RESULTS: The MIC-A A6 allele was significantly more frequent in the Arab patient group (19/20 (95%)) than in healthy Arab controls (25/42 (60%)) (p(corr)=0.015, OR=12.92), but not in the NAJ patients (16/24 (67%)) compared with NAJ healthy controls (48 /88 (55%)) (p(corr)=1.02, OR=1.667). In stratification analysis of the Arab subgroup, on the confounding effect of MIC-A A6 on HLA-B51 association and vice versa, Behçet's disease was distinctly associated only with HLA-B51. CONCLUSIONS: These results imply strong association between the MIC-A A6 allele and the disease in Israeli Arabs, but not in Israeli NAJ patients. The stratification analysis indicates that this association results secondarily from a strong linkage disequilibrium with HLA-B51, and the real disease susceptibility gene which plays a part in the development of Behçet's disease is most probably the HLA-B51 allele itself.
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