deCODE Genetics: Loss of Function Variant in FLT3 Strongly Increases the Risk of Autoimmune Thyroid Disease and Other Autoimmune Diseases
PR84512
REYKJAVIK, Iceland, June 25, 2020 /PRNewswire=KYODO JBN/ --
Scientists at deCODE genetics, a subsidiary of Amgen, and their collaborators
from the Icelandic healthcare system, University of Iceland and the Karolinska
Institute in Sweden, today publish a study in Nature, comparing over 30
thousand patients with autoimmune thyroid disease from Iceland and UK with 725
thousand controls. Autoimmune thyroid disease (AITD) is the most common
autoimmune disease and is highly heritable. The scientists found 99 sequence
variants that associate with autoimmune thyroid disease and 84 of those had not
been associated with the disease before.
One of the newly discovered sequence variants is in a gene that codes for the
FLT3 receptor (fms-related tyrosine kinase 3) on blood cells and immune cells,
and is of large interest for several reasons.
First, it strongly increases the risk of autoimmune thyroid disease and other
autoimmune diseases, both systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), rheumatoid
arthritis (RA) and celiac disease. These diseases are all characterized by
autoantibodies and are more common in women than men. Furthermore, patients
with these diseases are quite often affected by autoimmune thyroid disease as
well.
Second, it is known that activating somatic mutations in the FLT3 gene
associate with acute myeloid leukemia (AML). Therefore, the scientists tested
whether this FLT3 germline variant, affects the risk of AML like it increases
the risk of autoimmune diseases. It turned out that it almost doubles the risk
of AML, but not the risk of cancer overall.
Third, it is quite remarkable that this variant in FLT3, which is in an intron
of the gene and does not directly affect coding sequence, can have so strong
effect on disease risk. It turns out that the variant introduces a stop codon
in one-third of the transcripts, which results in a shorter protein that lacks
the kinase part, which is essential for its function.
Finally, this variant in FLT3 affects the plasma levels of several other
proteins in the body, especially the ligand of FLT3, resulting in almost double
the level in carriers. This molecular couple, the FLT3 receptor and its ligand,
has a key role in the development of blood cells that are important in both
acute myeloid leukemia and immune responses. Hence, this variant is a loss of
function mutation that through compensatory increase in the level of the
ligand, acts as a gain of function.
"This report describes a novel major risk gene for several autoimmune diseases,
discovered through a genome-wide study on autoimmune thyroid disease, and how
the risk variant affects the gene product, FLT3, and consequently the level of
the ligand to the FLT3 receptor in blood, thereby demonstrating its functional
importance," says Prof. Saedis Saevarsdottir, scientist at deCODE genetics and
first author on the paper
"The discoveries presented in this paper are based on the sequential
application of genomics, transcriptomics and proteomics; the combination of
these three omics in a hypothesis independent manner yields a remarkably
powerful approach to the study of human disease," says Kari Stefansson, CEO of
deCODE genetics and senior author on the paper.
Based in Reykjavik, Iceland, deCODE is a global leader in analyzing and
understanding the human genome. Using its unique expertise in human genetics
combined with growing expertise in transcriptomics and population proteomics
and vast amount of phenotypic data, deCODE has discovered risk factors for
dozens of common diseases and provided key insights into their pathogenesis.
The purpose of understanding the genetics of disease is to use that information
to create new means of diagnosing, treating and preventing disease. deCODE is a
wholly-owned subsidiary of Amgen (NASDAQ: AMGN).
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Contact:
Thora Kristin Asgeirsdottir
PR and Communications
deCODE genetics
thoraa@decode.is
+354 894 1909
Source: deCODE Genetics Inc.
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