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Evidence that genetic susceptibility to Mycobacterium tuberculosis in a Brazilian population is under oligogenic control: Linkage study of the candidate genes NRAMP1 and TNFA

Evidence that genetic susceptibility to Mycobacterium tuberculosis in a Brazilian population is under oligogenic control: Linkage study of the candidate genes NRAMP1 and TNFA
Evidence that genetic susceptibility to Mycobacterium tuberculosis in a Brazilian population is under oligogenic control: Linkage study of the candidate genes NRAMP1 and TNFA

Setting: A study of multicase tuberculosis pedigrees from Northern Brazil. Objective: To determine the model of inheritance for genetic susceptibility to tuberculosis, and to test the hypothesis that TNFA and NRAMP1 are candidate susceptibility genes. Design: The study sample included 98 pedigrees, 704 individuals and 205 nuclear families. Segregation analyses were performed using the programs POINTER and COMDS. Combined segregation and linkage analysis was carried out within COMDS. Non-parametric linkage analyses were performed using BETA. Results: A sporadic model for disease distribution in families was strongly rejected, as were polygenic and multifactorial models. A codominant single gene model provided the best fit (P < 0.001) to the data using POINTER. COMDS extended the analysis to compare single-gene and two-gene models. A general two-locus model for disease control was marginally favoured (0.01 < P < 0.05) over the codominant single-gene model. No evidence was found for linkage between susceptibility to disease per se and the TNF gene cluster. Weak linkage was observed using COMDS for genes (IL8RB, P = 0.039; D2S1471, P = 0.025) tightly linked (< 150 kb) to NRAMP1, but not for NRAMP1 itself. Conclusions: Tuberculosis susceptibility in this region of Brazil is under oligogenic control. Although a minor role for TNFA and NRAMP1 cannot be excluded, our data suggest that neither is a major gene involved in this oligogenic control.

0962-8479
35-45
Shaw, M. A.
8351b8ff-cb17-40e6-8845-366cd7f24ae8
Collins, A.
7daa83eb-0b21-43b2-af1a-e38fb36e2a64
Peacock, C. S.
aceb4fa2-46cc-4c76-b713-77675f07507e
Miller, E. N.
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Black, G. F.
f0ba4c20-6036-40ac-9c47-f217391ead04
Sibthorpe, D.
831f28be-af92-435d-9409-54046197ad2d
Lins-Lainson, Z.
0c865e29-0bd8-45be-abee-7dc875a6aec6
Shaw, J. J.
e701180a-949c-48ae-961b-4a9a6c2dc9c6
Ramos, F.
ae744cb1-2551-4603-9372-45879ae45d06
Silveira, F.
e3a9aabc-6db4-4736-a4bd-cea31ba273f8
Blackwell, J. M.
5ec719ae-6ca3-4542-b838-08c727ba04e4
Shaw, M. A.
8351b8ff-cb17-40e6-8845-366cd7f24ae8
Collins, A.
7daa83eb-0b21-43b2-af1a-e38fb36e2a64
Peacock, C. S.
aceb4fa2-46cc-4c76-b713-77675f07507e
Miller, E. N.
2eb498c1-8efb-4b69-82b4-8be04814aea4
Black, G. F.
f0ba4c20-6036-40ac-9c47-f217391ead04
Sibthorpe, D.
831f28be-af92-435d-9409-54046197ad2d
Lins-Lainson, Z.
0c865e29-0bd8-45be-abee-7dc875a6aec6
Shaw, J. J.
e701180a-949c-48ae-961b-4a9a6c2dc9c6
Ramos, F.
ae744cb1-2551-4603-9372-45879ae45d06
Silveira, F.
e3a9aabc-6db4-4736-a4bd-cea31ba273f8
Blackwell, J. M.
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Shaw, M. A., Collins, A., Peacock, C. S., Miller, E. N., Black, G. F., Sibthorpe, D., Lins-Lainson, Z., Shaw, J. J., Ramos, F., Silveira, F. and Blackwell, J. M. (1997) Evidence that genetic susceptibility to Mycobacterium tuberculosis in a Brazilian population is under oligogenic control: Linkage study of the candidate genes NRAMP1 and TNFA. Tubercle and Lung Disease, 78 (1), 35-45. (doi:10.1016/S0962-8479(97)90014-9).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Setting: A study of multicase tuberculosis pedigrees from Northern Brazil. Objective: To determine the model of inheritance for genetic susceptibility to tuberculosis, and to test the hypothesis that TNFA and NRAMP1 are candidate susceptibility genes. Design: The study sample included 98 pedigrees, 704 individuals and 205 nuclear families. Segregation analyses were performed using the programs POINTER and COMDS. Combined segregation and linkage analysis was carried out within COMDS. Non-parametric linkage analyses were performed using BETA. Results: A sporadic model for disease distribution in families was strongly rejected, as were polygenic and multifactorial models. A codominant single gene model provided the best fit (P < 0.001) to the data using POINTER. COMDS extended the analysis to compare single-gene and two-gene models. A general two-locus model for disease control was marginally favoured (0.01 < P < 0.05) over the codominant single-gene model. No evidence was found for linkage between susceptibility to disease per se and the TNF gene cluster. Weak linkage was observed using COMDS for genes (IL8RB, P = 0.039; D2S1471, P = 0.025) tightly linked (< 150 kb) to NRAMP1, but not for NRAMP1 itself. Conclusions: Tuberculosis susceptibility in this region of Brazil is under oligogenic control. Although a minor role for TNFA and NRAMP1 cannot be excluded, our data suggest that neither is a major gene involved in this oligogenic control.

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More information

Published date: 1997
Additional Information: Funding Information: This work was supported by grants from the Wellcome Trust. We would also like to thank the people of Belem for their contribution to this study.

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 470934
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/470934
ISSN: 0962-8479
PURE UUID: 1f6d52b5-5e16-488d-bf39-69d340e95c40
ORCID for A. Collins: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7108-0771

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Date deposited: 21 Oct 2022 16:33
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 02:38

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Contributors

Author: M. A. Shaw
Author: A. Collins ORCID iD
Author: C. S. Peacock
Author: E. N. Miller
Author: G. F. Black
Author: D. Sibthorpe
Author: Z. Lins-Lainson
Author: J. J. Shaw
Author: F. Ramos
Author: F. Silveira
Author: J. M. Blackwell

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