Familial Mediterranean Fever: Observations from a pilot gene expression microarray analysis study

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Cellular and Molecular Biology Association

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Familial Mediterranean Fever (FMF) is an autosomal recessive autoinflammatory disease affecting people of Mediterranean ancestry. The disease is caused by mutations in the MEFV gene located on chromosome 16p13.3. The aim of this pilot study was to assess global gene expression and identify genes and pathways involved in FMF that could be downstream to MEFV mutations or could be novel involved. EDTA blood samples were collected from 14 patients showing FMF-like symptoms and age-matched to 7 controls showing healthy conditions. Microarray was used to assess global gene expression and identify genes and pathways involved in FMF. When we compared individuals with MEFV mutations (homozygous and heterozygous) to control group, probe sets of receptor proteins HLA-DQA1 and HLA-DQB1 were significantly over expressed by 5 folds among the patients group. Despite its limitations, this pilot study could strongly suggest that the role of HLA be investigated in the pathogenesis of MEFV mutation and as a potential moderator explaining penetrance and variation in symptoms among patient groups. © 2017 by the C.M.B. Association.

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Familial mediterranean fever, Fmf, Hla, Mefv, Microarray, Pilot, Blood pressure, Female, Gene expression regulation, Genetic predisposition to disease, Hla-dq alpha-chains, Hla-dq beta-chains, Humans, Male, Oligonucleotide array sequence analysis, Pilot projects, Edetic acid, Hla dqa1 antigen, Hla dqb1 antigen, Pyrin, Rna, Hla dq antigen, Hla-dqa1 antigen, Hla-dqb1 antigen, Article, Blood sampling, Clinical article, Comparative study, Controlled study, Gene expression, Gene identification, Gene mutation, Gene overexpression, Heterozygosity, Hla system, Homozygosity, Human, Microarray analysis, Molecular pathology, Penetrance, Pilot study, Rna extraction, Signal transduction, Dna microarray, Genetic predisposition, Genetics, Pathophysiology

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