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DOI: 10.1038/nature01621
¤ OpenAccess: Bronze
This work has “Bronze” OA status. This means it is free to read on the publisher landing page, but without any identifiable license.

Association of the T-cell regulatory gene CTLA4 with susceptibility to autoimmune disease

Hironori Ueda,Joanna M M Howson,Laura Esposito,J. M. Heward,Hywel Snook,Giselle Chamberlain,Dan Rainbow,Hunter Kmd.,A. N. Smith,Gianfranco Di Genova,Mathias Herr,Ingrid Dahlman,Felicity Payne,Deborah J. Smyth,Christopher Lowe,Twells Rcj.,Sarah Howlett,Barry Healy,Sarah Nutland,Helen E. Rance,Vincent H. Everett,Luc J. Smink,Adam Lam,Heather J. Cordell,Neil M. Walker,C Bordin,John S. Hulme,Costantino Motzo,Francesco Cucca,J. Fred Hess,Michael L. Metzker,Jane Rogers,Simon G. Gregory,Amit Allahabadia,Ratnasingam Nithiyananthan,Eva Tuomilehto‐Wolf,Jaakko Tuomilehto,Polly J. Bingley,Kathleen M. Gillespie,D E Undlien,Kjersti S. Rønningen,Cristian Guja,C Ionescu-Tîrgovişte,David A. Savage,Alexander P. Maxwell,Dennis Carson,Christopher Patterson,Jayne A. Franklyn,David Clayton,Laurence B. Peterson,Linda S. Wicker,John A. Todd,S Gough

Autoimmune disease
Biology
Genetics
2003
Genes and mechanisms involved in common complex diseases, such as the autoimmune disorders that affect approximately 5% of the population, remain obscure. Here we identify polymorphisms of the cytotoxic T lymphocyte antigen 4 gene (CTLA4)—which encodes a vital negative regulatory molecule of the immune system—as candidates for primary determinants of risk of the common autoimmune disorders Graves' disease, autoimmune hypothyroidism and type 1 diabetes. In humans, disease susceptibility was mapped to a non-coding 6.1?kb 3′ region of CTLA4, the common allelic variation of which was correlated with lower messenger RNA levels of the soluble alternative splice form of CTLA4. In the mouse model of type 1 diabetes, susceptibility was also associated with variation in CTLA-4 gene splicing with reduced production of a splice form encoding a molecule lacking the CD80/CD86 ligand-binding domain. Genetic mapping of variants conferring a small disease risk can identify pathways in complex disorders, as exemplified by our discovery of inherited, quantitative alterations of CTLA4 contributing to autoimmune tissue destruction.
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    Association of the T-cell regulatory gene CTLA4 with susceptibility to autoimmune disease” is a paper by Hironori Ueda Joanna M M Howson Laura Esposito J. M. Heward Hywel Snook Giselle Chamberlain Dan Rainbow Hunter Kmd. A. N. Smith Gianfranco Di Genova Mathias Herr Ingrid Dahlman Felicity Payne Deborah J. Smyth Christopher Lowe Twells Rcj. Sarah Howlett Barry Healy Sarah Nutland Helen E. Rance Vincent H. Everett Luc J. Smink Adam Lam Heather J. Cordell Neil M. Walker C Bordin John S. Hulme Costantino Motzo Francesco Cucca J. Fred Hess Michael L. Metzker Jane Rogers Simon G. Gregory Amit Allahabadia Ratnasingam Nithiyananthan Eva Tuomilehto‐Wolf Jaakko Tuomilehto Polly J. Bingley Kathleen M. Gillespie D E Undlien Kjersti S. Rønningen Cristian Guja C Ionescu-Tîrgovişte David A. Savage Alexander P. Maxwell Dennis Carson Christopher Patterson Jayne A. Franklyn David Clayton Laurence B. Peterson Linda S. Wicker John A. Todd S Gough published in 2003. It has an Open Access status of “bronze”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.