Identification of a novel inflammation-protective locus in the Fischer rat

Inbred LEW/N rats are relatively susceptible, while histocompatible inbred F344/N rats are relatively resistant to development of a wide variety of inflammatory diseases in response to a range of pro-inflammatory stimuli. In a LEW/N vs. F344/N F2 intercross, we identified a quantitative trait locus...

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Veröffentlicht in:Mammalian genome 1999-04, Vol.10 (4), p.362-365
Hauptverfasser: Listwak, S, Barrientos, R M, Koike, G, Ghosh, S, Gomez, M, Misiewicz, B, Sternberg, E M
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container_end_page 365
container_issue 4
container_start_page 362
container_title Mammalian genome
container_volume 10
creator Listwak, S
Barrientos, R M
Koike, G
Ghosh, S
Gomez, M
Misiewicz, B
Sternberg, E M
description Inbred LEW/N rats are relatively susceptible, while histocompatible inbred F344/N rats are relatively resistant to development of a wide variety of inflammatory diseases in response to a range of pro-inflammatory stimuli. In a LEW/N vs. F344/N F2 intercross, we identified a quantitative trait locus (QTL) on Chr 10 that protects in a dominant fashion against the exudate volume component of innate inflammation in the F344/N rat, as well as a suggestive QTL on Chr 2 near the Fibrinogen cluster region. The exudate volume linkage region on Chr 10 may be similar to one of the multiple regions found to link to inflammatory arthritis phenotypes in other crosses. The suggestive linkage on Chr 2 has not been previously reported and does not seem to contribute to this phenotype in the same manner as the QTL on Chr 10. These findings are consistent with the hypothesis that the innate exudate volume trait is a sub-phenotype of more complex inflammatory phenotypes, such as arthritis, and genes within the Chr 10 linkage region could account for differences in this non-specific acute phase component of the inflammatory response. Since the rat Chr 10 exudate volume linkage region we have identified is syntenic with a region of human Chr 17 that has been shown to link to a variety of autoimmune/inflammatory diseases, including insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, multiple sclerosis, and psoriasis, identification of genes within this linkage region will shed light on genes relevant to the earliest inflammatory component and to susceptibility and resistance to such human autoimmune/inflammatory diseases.
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subjects Animals
Chromosome Mapping
Genetic Linkage
Genetic Predisposition to Disease
Genome
Humans
Inflammation - genetics
Rats
Rats, Inbred F344 - genetics
title Identification of a novel inflammation-protective locus in the Fischer rat
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