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Dogs At Risk For SLE
Dog studies reveal strong risk factors for SLE
Researchers at Uppsala University and the Swedish
University of Agricultural Sciences (SLU) have found several genes that lead to
increased risk for an SLE-like autoimmune disorder in dogs. This is the first
time scientists have found genes behind such a complex disease. The study is
being published today in the Web edition of Nature Genetics.
"It's extremely interesting and feels fantastic that we can
so readily find genes even for complex diseases in dogs. The study also provides
entirely new avenues for studying SLE in humans," says Professor Kerstin
Lindblad-Toh, who directed the study, which was carried out in collaboration
with scientists at SLU and colleagues in Finland and the US.
To find genes for human common diseases, thousands of blood
samples are needed from both patients and healthy controls. The structure
provided by dog breeding, and the refinement of various properties within the
breeds, make it much easier to find pathogenic genes with a smaller number of
samples.
Veterinarian Helene Hamlin at SLU has previously described
an autoimmune disease complex in the breed Nova Scotia duck tolling retriever,
which is characterized by a rheumatic SLE-like disorder (Systemic Lupus
Erythematosus), where the dog develops joint complaints and inflammatory
symptoms in various inner organs. In these, the body has often formed antibodies
against the nuclei of the body's own cells, a characteristic found in SLE in
humans as well. The other variant of the disease complex is non-bacterial
meningitis, so-called steroid-responsive meningitis-arthritis (SRMA).
The researchers sifted through the DNA of 81 diseased dogs
and 57 healthy dogs and identified five regions in the genome that each, greatly
increase the risk of developing the disease. Three of the regions greatly
increase the risk of developing the SLE-like variant of the disease, while the
other two regions increase the risk for both SLE and meningitis.
- "We know that SLE in humans is caused by many genes and
were therefore not surprised to find several risk factors that contribute to the
disease in dogs," says Maria Wilbe, a doctoral candidate at SLU and lead author
of the article.
- "It's worth pointing out that the canine risk factors are
very strong," says Kerstin Lindblad-Toh. "The risk factors that have been found
thus far in humans with SLE may double the risk, but in dogs, each disease gene
increases the risk about five times."
One can even hypothesize as to why Nova Scotia duck tolling
retrievers develop this disorder to such a great extent. The breed was decimated
by canine distemper virus in the early 20th century. The dogs that survived may
have been the dogs with the strongest immune system, and this strong immune
response is now also resulting in an autoimmune disorder. The scientists have
examined what the genes are in the risk regions and note that several of these
genes govern the activation of T cells, the white blood cells that deal with
viruses in our immune system.
"The genes that
have thus far been found in humans with SLE do not primarily regulate T cells,
but a major share of the genetic risk factors are still unknown in humans. It
will therefore be interesting to move on and look at various subtypes of SLE and
see whether genes that regulate T cells cause any of them," says Kerstin
Lindblad-Toh.
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