We first demonstrated that genetic variants at the TRAF1/C5 locus are significantly associated with RA in Han Chinese, suggesting that TRAF1/C5 may play a role in the development of RA in this population, which expands the pathogenesis role of TRAF1/C5 in a different ethnicity.
We also demonstrate that in the presence of SE, the minor allele of MMEL1-TNFRSF14 significantly reduces RA risk in a dominant manner, whereas TRAF1-C5 increases the risk.
Our results demonstrate that within and around TRAF1, excluding PHF19 and C5, SNPs highly correlated with rs7021206, but not those correlated with rs3761847, are associated with RA in both Asians and Caucasians and are possibly correlated with causative variations.
Here we show that monocytes from healthy human subjects with a rheumatoid arthritis-associated single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) in the TRAF1 gene express less TRAF1 protein but greater amounts of inflammatory cytokines in response to lipopolysaccharide (LPS).
This polymorphism was one of the strongest predictors of death in RA (for TRAF1/C5 GG versus AA, hazard ratio 3.85 [95% confidence interval 1.18-12.59], P=0.026) alongside the erythrocyte sedimentation rate, triglyceride level, prednisolone use, and age.
To carry out a meta-analysis of the available evidence for the association of polymorphisms in the TRAF1-C5 locus and 6q23 region with rheumatoid arthritis.
The 6q23 and 4q27 SNPs assayed were nonpolymorphic in this population, and the TRAF1/C5, CD40, and CCL21 SNPs did not show any evidence for association with RA in this population of Korean patients.
In the total RA inception cohort, the HLA-DRB1 shared epitope (per-allele odds ratio (OR) = 2.1, trend P < 0.0001), PTPN22 (per-allele OR = 1.5, trend P < 0.0001), OLIG3/TNFAIP3 locus (per-allele OR = 1.2, trend P = 0.009) and TRAF1/C5 locus (per-allele OR = 1.1, trend P = 0.04) were associated with RA.
Re-evaluation of putative rheumatoid arthritis susceptibility genes in the post-genome wide association study era and hypothesis of a key pathway underlying susceptibility.