Publication | Closed Access
Susceptibility loci for atopic dermatitis on chromosomes 3, 13, 15, 17 and 18 in a Swedish population
105
Citations
47
References
2002
Year
GeneticsImmunodeficienciesGenetic EpidemiologyLinkage AnalysisSkin AllergyAtopic Dermatitis GenesGenomicsDermatologyImmune-related Gene PolymorphismGenetic MedicineSusceptibility LociClinical GeneticsHuman PhenotypesContact DermatitisPublic HealthQuantitative GeneticsAllergyStatistical GeneticsAutoimmunityGenetic VariationCandidate Gene AnalysisAtopic DermatitisPhenotype Atopic DermatitisPathogenesisSwedish PopulationMedical GeneticsMedicine
Atopic dermatitis is a hereditary, pruritic, inflammatory and chronic skin disease that typically presents in early childhood and may continue or recur later. The etiology of atopic dermatitis is unknown, but several lines of evidence indicate that it is a multifactorial disorder caused by the combined influence of genetic and environmental factors, even though the relative contributions of genes and environment are not known. To identify important loci that contribute to the development of atopic dermatitis, we conducted a genome-wide linkage analysis with 367 microsatellite markers, using a non-parametric affected relative-pair method in 109 pedigrees. Three qualitative phenotypes and one semi-quantitative phenotype were studied. For the phenotype atopic dermatitis, linkage to chromosome region 3p24–22 was found. For another phenotype, atopic dermatitis combined with raised allergen-specific IgE levels, a suggestive linkage was found to chromosome region 18q21. For the semi-quantitative phenotype severity score of atopic dermatitis, suggestive linkage was found to chromosome regions 3q14, 13q14, 15q14–15 and 17q21. Identifying chromosome regions linked to susceptibility genes for atopic dermatitis provides a platform from which the search for atopic dermatitis genes can proceed.
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