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Examining ERBB2 as a candidate gene for susceptibility to leprosy (Hansen’s disease) in Brazil

Abstract

Leprosy remains prevalent in Brazil. ErbB2 is a receptor for leprosy bacilli entering Schwann cells, which mediates Mycobacterium leprae-induced demyelination and the ERBB2 gene lies within a leprosy susceptibility locus on chromosome 17q11-q21. To determine whether polymorphisms at the ERBB2 locus contribute to this linkage peak, three haplotype tagging single nucleotide polymorphisms (tag-SNPs) (rs2517956, rs2952156, rs1058808) were genotyped in 72 families (208 cases; 372 individuals) from the state of Pará (PA). All three tag-SNPs were associated with leprosy per se [best SNP rs2517959 odds ratio (OR) = 2.22; 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.37-3.59; p = 0.001]. Lepromatous (LL) (OR = 3.25; 95% CI 1.37-7.70; p = 0.007) and tuberculoid (TT) (OR = 1.79; 95% CI 1.04-3.05; p = 0.034) leprosy both contributed to the association, which is consistent with the previous linkage to chromosome 17q11-q21 in the population from PA and supports the functional role of ErbB2 in disease pathogenesis. To attempt to replicate these findings, six SNPs (rs2517955, rs2517956, rs1810132, rs2952156, rs1801200, rs1058808) were genotyped in a population-based sample of 570 leprosy cases and 370 controls from the state of Rio Grande do Norte (RN) and the results were analysed using logistic regression analysis. However, none of the associations were replicated in the RN sample, whether analysed for leprosy per se, LL leprosy, TT leprosy, erythema nodosum leprosum or reversal reaction conditions. The role of polymorphisms at ERBB2 in controlling susceptibility to leprosy in Brazil therefore remains unclear.

leprosy; genetic susceptibility; ErbB2 receptor; Brazil


Hansen’s disease, or leprosy, is caused by infection with Mycobacterium leprae. The prevalence of Hansen’s disease worldwide has decreased since the introduction of multidrug therapy (MDT) (Cartel et al. 1992Cartel JL, Spiegel A, Ngoc LN, Moulia-Pelat JP, Martin PM, Grosset JH 1992. Leprosy in French Polynesia. The possible impact of multidrug therapy on epidemiological trends. Lepr Rev 63: 223-230.). However, there continue to be new cases of Hansen’s disease, with areas of active disease transmission (Subramanian et al. 2003Subramanian M, Ali MKS, Thorat DM, Muthukumar M, Sathiskumar E, Ramadoss C, Khan MA 2003. Leprosy situation in endemic states of India and prospects of elimination of the disease. Indian J Lepr 75: 335-345.); 232,857 new diagnoses of Hansen’s disease were reported to the World Health Organization in 2012 (who.int/wer/2013/wer8835.pdf). In particular, Brazil continues to have one of the highest new case detection rates in the world (1.97/10,000 inhabitants), with 33,303 new cases reported in 2012 (who.int/wer/2013/wer8835.pdf).

In areas of higher endemicity, the majority of infections with M. leprae are asymptomatic (Fine 1983Fine PE 1983. Natural history of leprosy - aspects relevant to a leprosy vaccine. Int J Lepr Other Mycobact Dis 51: 553-555.). The clinical disease develops along a spectrum from a T-helper (Th)1-predominant response causing one or a few skin lesions [tuberculoid (TT) form] to a Th2-predominant response with diffuse infiltrative disease [lepromatous (LL) form] (Walker & Lockwood 2006Walker SL, Lockwood DN 2006. The clinical and immunological features of leprosy. Br Med Bull 77-78: 103-121.). Patients with clinical forms between these two poles have borderline (BB) disease. Hansen’s disease is curable with a six-12 month course of MDT, although the nerve damage due to demyelination is generally irreversible.

Within the first several days of therapy, there is a decrease in M. leprae transmission (Manglani & Arif 2006Manglani PR, Arif MA 2006. Multidrug therapy in leprosy. J Indian Med Assoc 104: 686-688.). The clinical course for approximately 30% of patients with Hansen’s disease is complicated by immune reactions (Beck-Bleumink & Berhe 1992Beck-Bleumink M, Berhe D 1992. Ocurrence of reactions, their diagnosis and management in leprosy patient treated with multidrug therapy. Experience in the leprosy control programmer of the all Africa leprosy and reabilation Training center (ALERT) in Ethiopia. Int J Lepr 60: 173-184.). Type 1, or reversal reaction (RR), often occurs in patients with BB forms of the disease, either at diagnosis or immediately after initiation of treatment and is characterised by an augmentation of the host immune response that results in swelling and inflammation of existing lesions with worsening nerve function (Trindade et al. 2010Trindade MA, Benard G, Ura S, Ghidella CC, Avelleira JC, Vianna FR, Marques AB, Naafs B, Fleury RN 2010. Granulomatous reactivation during the course of a leprosy infection: reaction or relapse. PLoS Negl Trop Dis 4: e921.). A type 2 reaction, or erythema nodosum leprosum (ENL), causes systemic symptoms, such as fever, subcutaneous nodules and a vasculitis-like syndrome and is frequent in patients with the LL form (Sreenivasan et al. 1998Sreenivasan P, Misra RS, Wilfred D, Nath I 1998. Lepromatous leprosy patients show T helper 1-like cytokine profile with differential expression of interleukin-10 during type 1 and 2 reactions. Immunology 95: 529-536.).

Several lines of evidence, including twin studies, genome-wide linkage and genome-wide association studies, indicate that host genetic factors are important in determining susceptibility to M. leprae (Casanova & Abel 2002Casanova JL, Abel L 2002. Genetic dissection of immunity to mycobacteria: the human model. Annu Rev Immunol 20: 581-620., Fernando & Britton 2006Fernando SL, Britton WJ 2006. Genetic susceptibility to mycobacterial disease in humans. Immunol Cell Biol 84: 125-137., Berrington & Hawn 2007Berrington WR, Hawn TR 2007. Mycobacterium tuberculosis, macrophages and the innate immune response: does common variation matter? Immunol Rev 219: 167-186., Zhang et al. 2009Zhang FR, Huang W, Chen SM, Sun LD, Liu H, Li Y, Cui Y, Yan XX, Yang HT, Yang RD, Chu TS, Zhang C, Zhang L, Han JW, Yu GQ, Quan C, Yu YX, Zhang Z, Shi BQ, Zhang LH, Cheng H, Wang CY, Lin Y, Zheng HF, Fu XA, Zuo XB, Wang Q, Long H, Sun YP, Cheng YL, Tian HQ, Zhou FS, Liu HX, Lu WS, He SM, Du WL, Shen M, Jin QY, Wang Y, Low HQ, Erwin T, Yang NH, Li JY, Zhao X, Jiao YL, Mao LG, Yin G, Jiang ZX, Wang XD, Yu JP, Hu ZH, Gong CH, Liu YQ, Liu RY, Wang DM, Wei D, Liu JX, Cao WK, Cao HZ, Li YP, Yan WG, Wei SY, Wang KJ, Hibberd ML, Yang S, Zhang XJ, Liu JJ 2009. Genomewide association study of leprosy. N Engl J Med 361: 2609-2618.). The results of one genome-wide linkage study (Miller et al. 2004Miller EN, Jamieson SE, Joberty C, Fakiola M, Hudson D, Peacock CS, Cordell HJ, Shaw M-A, Lins-Lainson Z, Shaw JJ, Ramos F, Silveira F, Blackwell JM 2004. Genome-wide scans for leprosy and tuberculosis susceptibility genes in Brazilians. Genes Immun 5: 63-67.), together with detailed mapping (Jamieson et al. 2004Jamieson SE, Miller EN, Black GF, Peacock CS, Cordell HJ, Howson JMM, Shaw M-A, Burgner D, Xu W, Lins-Lainson Z, Shaw JJ, Ramos F, Silveira F, Blackwell JM 2004. Evidence for a cluster of genes on chromosome 17q11-q21 controlling susceptibility to tuberculosis and leprosy in Brazilians. Genes Immun 5: 46-57.), provided evidence for a cluster of leprosy and tuberculosis susceptibility loci on chromosome 17q11-q21. A role for genes encoding inducible nitric oxide synthase and chemokines within this region was proposed for tuberculosis (Jamieson et al. 2004Jamieson SE, Miller EN, Black GF, Peacock CS, Cordell HJ, Howson JMM, Shaw M-A, Burgner D, Xu W, Lins-Lainson Z, Shaw JJ, Ramos F, Silveira F, Blackwell JM 2004. Evidence for a cluster of genes on chromosome 17q11-q21 controlling susceptibility to tuberculosis and leprosy in Brazilians. Genes Immun 5: 46-57.), but the genes for leprosy have not been identified under this linkage peak. The ERBB2 gene, which encodes a member of the epidermal growth factor receptor family of receptor tyrosine kinases, lies within this region and has been shown to be important in M. leprae-induced Schwann cell demyelination (Tapinos et al. 2006Tapinos N, Ohnishi M, Rambukkana A 2006. ErbB2 receptor tyrosine kinase signaling mediates early demyelination induced by leprosy bacilli. Nat Med 12: 961-966.). The binding of M. leprae to myelinated Schwann cells through ligation to the ErbB2 receptor results in Schwann cell demyelination and increases the population of de-differentiated Schwann cells. It is within these non-myelinated, de-differentiated Schwann cells that M. leprae preferentially proliferates (Tapinos et al. 2006Tapinos N, Ohnishi M, Rambukkana A 2006. ErbB2 receptor tyrosine kinase signaling mediates early demyelination induced by leprosy bacilli. Nat Med 12: 961-966.). Therefore, the ErbB2 receptor is important in M. leprae-induced demyelination and may represent a novel candidate underlying the 17q11-q21 linkage peak. The objective of this work was to examine whether polymorphisms in the ERBB2 gene were associated with leprosy in primary and replication cohorts from northeastern Brazil.

SUBJECTS, MATERIALS AND METHODS

Subjects and study design - The primary cohort was comprised of 72 multicase leprosy families (372 individuals) (Table I) identified from medical records at local Ministry of Health centres in Belém, state of Pará (PA), Brazil and used in our earlier studies demonstrating linkage (Miller et al. 2004Miller EN, Jamieson SE, Joberty C, Fakiola M, Hudson D, Peacock CS, Cordell HJ, Shaw M-A, Lins-Lainson Z, Shaw JJ, Ramos F, Silveira F, Blackwell JM 2004. Genome-wide scans for leprosy and tuberculosis susceptibility genes in Brazilians. Genes Immun 5: 63-67.) and association (Jamieson et al. 2004Jamieson SE, Miller EN, Black GF, Peacock CS, Cordell HJ, Howson JMM, Shaw M-A, Burgner D, Xu W, Lins-Lainson Z, Shaw JJ, Ramos F, Silveira F, Blackwell JM 2004. Evidence for a cluster of genes on chromosome 17q11-q21 controlling susceptibility to tuberculosis and leprosy in Brazilians. Genes Immun 5: 46-57.) to genes in the chromosome 17q11-q21 region. Leprosy was diagnosed by highly experienced clinicians based on clinical examination for anaesthetic skin lesions, results from slit skin smear testing for acid-fast bacilli and, in some health centres, histological analysis. Patients were categorised into disease subtype groups according to the Ridley-Jopling histological scale (Ridley & Jopling 1966Ridley DS, Jopling WH 1966. Classification of leprosy according to immunity. A five-group system. Int J Lepr Other Mycobact Dis 34: 255-273.) and/or bacterial load. These subtypes were LL, borderline lepromatous (BL), BB or borderline tuberculoid (BT)/TT. Information was not available on RRs or ENL in these patients. All families were of equivalent socioeconomic status. Blood was collected by venepuncture from all available family members and Epstein-Barr virus-transformed B cells were prepared, from which DNA was extracted for genetic analysis using a standard salting out procedure (Miller et al. 1988Miller SA, Dykes DD, Polesky HF 1988. A simple salting out procedure for extracting DNA from human nucleated cells. Nucleic Acids Res 16: 1215.).

TABLE I
Family structures for the 72 families with leprosy cases collected from Belém, state of Pará, Brazil

For replication of the results, a case-control study was performed (Table II). The study participants were people living in the state of Rio Grande do Norte (RN), where the leprosy detection rate has increased in the last 20 years (Queiroz et al. 2010Queiroz JW, Dias GH, Nobre ML, Dias MCS, Araujo SF, Barbosa JD, da Trindade-Neto PB, Blackwell JM, Jeronimo SM 2010. Geographic information systems and applied spatial statistics are efficient tools to study Hansen’s disease (leprosy) and to determine areas of greater risk of disease. Am J Trop Med Hyg 82: 306-314., Moura et al. 2013Moura ML, Dupnik KM, Sampaio GA, Nobrega PF, Jeronimo AK, do Nascimento-Filho JM, Dantas RLM, Queiroz JW, Barbosa JD, Dias G, Jeronimo SM, Souza MC, Nobre ML 2013. Active surveillance of Hansen’s disease (leprosy): importance for case finding among extra-domiciliary contacts. PLoS Negl Trop Dis 7: e2093.). Controls were unrelated subjects who lived in a household with a leprosy case or were neighbours of a case, who had greater than three years of contact with a leprosy case. The diagnosis of leprosy was made by a Hansen’s disease specialist and was based on clinical symptoms, skin smears and biopsy results. The leprosy was catego- rised based on the Ridley-Jopling classification (Ridley & Jopling 1966Ridley DS, Jopling WH 1966. Classification of leprosy according to immunity. A five-group system. Int J Lepr Other Mycobact Dis 34: 255-273.), with patients characterised as LL, BL, BB, BT/TT or other clinical forms (neural, indeterminate or unclassified). Information regarding the treatment of RR or ENL was also recorded. Sociodemographic information was collected using a questionnaire. DNA was obtained from whole blood using a standard salting out procedure (Miller et al. 1988Miller SA, Dykes DD, Polesky HF 1988. A simple salting out procedure for extracting DNA from human nucleated cells. Nucleic Acids Res 16: 1215.).

TABLE II
Characteristics of case-control sample from the state of Rio Grande do Norte, Brazil

Ethical considerations - Informed consent was obtained from all study participants or their legal guardians. Ethical approval for the collection of samples from PA was obtained from the ethical review committee of the Evandro Chagas Institute (Belém) (Blackwell et al. 1997Blackwell JM, Black GF, Peacock CS, Miller EN, Sibthorpe D, Gnananandha D, Shaw JJ, Silveira F, Lins-Lainson Z, Ramos F, Collins A, Shaw M-A 1997. Immunogenetics of leishmanial and mycobacterial infections: the Belém family study. Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci 352: 1331-1345.). Approval for the use of the samples in this study and for the collection and use of samples from RN was obtained from the Federal University of Rio Grande do Norte (CEP-UFRN 94-04) and the Brazilian National Ethical Committee (CONEP 11019). The certificate of ethical approval is 0042.0.051.051-09.

Genotyping - Initially, three haplotype tagging single nucleotide polymorphisms (tag-SNPs) (Table III) (rs2517956, rs2952156, rs1058808) across the ERBB2 gene were selected for genotyping in the primary cohort. An additional three SNPs (Table III) (rs2517955, rs1810132, rs1801200) were genotyped in the replication cohort. Two of the genotyped SNPs (Table III TABLE III Details of ERBB2 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) genotyped SNP rs# Location (build Hg19) Cohorts genotyped Minor allele Minor allele frequency (PA/RN) Position/function rs2517955 37843931 RN C 0.49 Upstream region rs2517956 37844109 PA and RN G 0.38/0.38 Upstream region rs1810132 37866255 RN C 0.39 Intronic rs2952156 37877085 PA and RN A 0.38/0.38 Intronic rs1801200a 37879838 RN G 0.15 Coding, non-synonymous (I655V) rs1058808 37884287 PA and RN C 0.49/0.50 Coding, non-synonymous (P1170A) a: now merged with SNP rs1136201. Cohorts are from states of Pará (PA) and Rio Grande do Norte (RN), Brazil. ) (rs1801200 and rs1058808) have been shown to be associated with ErbB2 receptor dysfunction (Frank et al. 2005Frank B, Hemminki K, Wirtenberger M, Bermejo JL, Bugert P, Klaes R, Schmutzler RK, Wappenschmidt B, Bartram CR, Burwinkel B 2005. The rare ERBB2 variant Ile654Val is associated with an increased familial breast cancer risk. Carcinogenesis 26: 643-647., Tong et al. 2009Tong SY, Ha SY, Ki KD, Lee JM, Lee SK, Lee KB, Kim MK, Cho CH, Kwon SY 2009. The effects of obesity and HER-2 polymorphisms as risk factors for endometrial cancer in Korean women. BJOG 116: 1046-1052.). Genotyping of the primary cohort was performed at the Cambridge Institute for Medical Research, Cambridge, UK, and was performed using TaqMan allelic discrimination technology (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA, USA) according to manufacturer’s instructions. Genotyping of the replication cohort was carried out at KBiosciences (Hertfordshire, UK) using KASPar chemistry.

TABLE III
Details of ERBB2 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) genotyped

Statistical analysis - For the genetic analyses in the present study, LL/BL/BB and TT/BT subtypes were grouped at the LL (referred to hereafter as L) and TT (referred to hereafter as T) ends of the spectrum, respectively. Groups of patients with ENL and RR conditions formed a subset of other leprosy patients. SNPs were checked for Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium in unrelated founders in the primary cohort or in the control sample for the replication cohort, as appropriate.

For the primary cohort, Mendelian inconsistencies were identified in familial data using PedCheck software (O’Connell & Weeks 1998O’Connell JR, Weeks DE 1998. PedCheck: a program for identification of genotype incompatibilities in linkage analysis. Am J Hum Genet 63: 259-266.) and removed prior to statistical analysis. Family-based association analyses were performed under an additive model using case/pseudo-control (CPC) analysis (Cordell et al. 2004Cordell HJ, Barratt BJ, Clayton DG 2004. Case/pseudocontrol analysis in genetic association studies: a unified framework for detection of genotype and haplotype associations, gene-gene and gene-environment interactions and parent-of-origin effects. Genet Epidemiol 26: 167-185.), wherein each affected offspring is matched with one to three pseudo-controls that are derived from the remaining possible genotypes of the parental mating. Odds ratios (OR), 95% confidence intervals (CI) and p-values were calculated using robust conditional logistic regression models employing a robust sandwich estimator of variance and a Wald χ2 test statistic to control for clustering of trios within pedigrees. CPC was implemented in STATA v.10 (stata.com/). For the replication cohort, case-control association analyses were performed under an additive model using logistic regression (LOGIT) in STATA v.10, adjusting for covariates as indicated below. Results were recorded as OR with 95% CI and associated p-values.

RESULTS

Characteristics of the populations studied - The characteristics of the Belém families used for the primary genetic association study of leprosy have been reported elsewhere (Jamieson et al. 2004Jamieson SE, Miller EN, Black GF, Peacock CS, Cordell HJ, Howson JMM, Shaw M-A, Burgner D, Xu W, Lins-Lainson Z, Shaw JJ, Ramos F, Silveira F, Blackwell JM 2004. Evidence for a cluster of genes on chromosome 17q11-q21 controlling susceptibility to tuberculosis and leprosy in Brazilians. Genes Immun 5: 46-57., Miller et al. 2004Miller EN, Jamieson SE, Joberty C, Fakiola M, Hudson D, Peacock CS, Cordell HJ, Shaw M-A, Lins-Lainson Z, Shaw JJ, Ramos F, Silveira F, Blackwell JM 2004. Genome-wide scans for leprosy and tuberculosis susceptibility genes in Brazilians. Genes Immun 5: 63-67.). Table I provides information on the family structures for these pedigrees. As a family study, covariates that might influence leprosy infection are controlled for within the study design. The characteristics of the replication sample are presented in Table II. The use of a case-control design meant that it was important to determine whether there were covariates that should be taken into account in the logistic regression analyses for genetic associations. A detailed analysis of epidemiological risk factors for leprosy in the main site from which the replication sample was drawn, Mossoró, RN, has been reported elsewhere (Queiroz et al. 2010Queiroz JW, Dias GH, Nobre ML, Dias MCS, Araujo SF, Barbosa JD, da Trindade-Neto PB, Blackwell JM, Jeronimo SM 2010. Geographic information systems and applied spatial statistics are efficient tools to study Hansen’s disease (leprosy) and to determine areas of greater risk of disease. Am J Trop Med Hyg 82: 306-314., Moura et al. 2013Moura ML, Dupnik KM, Sampaio GA, Nobrega PF, Jeronimo AK, do Nascimento-Filho JM, Dantas RLM, Queiroz JW, Barbosa JD, Dias G, Jeronimo SM, Souza MC, Nobre ML 2013. Active surveillance of Hansen’s disease (leprosy): importance for case finding among extra-domiciliary contacts. PLoS Negl Trop Dis 7: e2093.). In the current study, leprosy cases and controls (household and neighbour) had similar lengths of time living in the same house (p = 0.1030 and p = 0.2578, respectively), education (p = 0.4554 and p = 0.2737) and family income (p = 0.2146 and 0.2420) (Table II). In this study sample of 570 leprosy cases and 370 controls (Table II), there was a lower male-to-female ratio for controls compared to cases (p = 0.0080 and p < 0.0001, respectively), likely due to a greater availability of females at the time of recruitment. The mean age of the cases (44.09 years; range 10-98 years), household controls (37.95 years; range 11-93 years) and neighbour controls (38.39 years; range 10-92) also differed significantly (p = 0.0016 and p = 0.0002, respectively). Sex, age at the time of collection, education status and family income were all included as covariates in the genetic association analysis for the replication cohort.

Association between ERBB2 polymorphisms and the risk of leprosy in the primary family-based cohort - Table IV summarises the results of the robust CPC analysis to search for associations between leprosy per se and leprosy subtypes in the primary family-based cohort from PA. All three SNPs show association with leprosy per se under an additive model. Analysis of clinical sub-types showed that both the LL and TT forms of leprosy contributed to the associations at two of the SNPs (rs2517956 and rs1058808), with the strongest signals for association observed for the combined leprosy per se phenotype. The application of a Bonferroni correction for three independent SNPs provides a significance cut-off of p ≤ 0.017 (i.e., p = 0.05/3), which is achieved for both rs2517956 and rs1058808 in this primary sample. SNP rs2952156 was significantly associated for the L sample, but not the T sample. Overall, the data from this family-based cohort from PA supported an association between polymorphisms at ERBB2 and the susceptibility to leprosy per se.

TABLE IV
Robust case/pseudo-control (CPC) analysis for ERBB2 tagging single nucleotide polymorphisms (tag-SNPs) in primary families from the state of Pará, Brazil

ERBB2 polymorphisms and the risk of leprosy in the replication case-control cohort - Table V provides the results of the logistic regression analysis to search for associations between ERBB2 alleles and leprosy per se or leprosy sub-types in the replication case-control cohort from RN. None of the SNPs were associated with leprosy per se or with the TT or LL forms of leprosy, in this cohort (Table V). No association was observed for the ENL and RR groups compared to the non-ENL and non-RR controls (data not shown). Overall, the more heterogeneous population-based replication sample failed to replicate the associations between the polymorphisms at ERBB2 and any form of leprosy in RN.

TABLE V
Logistic regression analysis for association between ERBB2 tagging single nucleotide polymorphisms (tag-SNPs) in cases and controls from the state of Rio Grande do Norte (RN), Brazil

DISCUSSION

The data presented here provide evidence for an association between polymorphisms in the ERBB2 gene and leprosy per se in a set of multicase families from PA, which we previously used to demonstrate a linkage between leprosy susceptibility and genetic markers at chromosome 17q11-q22 (Jamieson et al. 2004Jamieson SE, Miller EN, Black GF, Peacock CS, Cordell HJ, Howson JMM, Shaw M-A, Burgner D, Xu W, Lins-Lainson Z, Shaw JJ, Ramos F, Silveira F, Blackwell JM 2004. Evidence for a cluster of genes on chromosome 17q11-q21 controlling susceptibility to tuberculosis and leprosy in Brazilians. Genes Immun 5: 46-57., Miller et al. 2004Miller EN, Jamieson SE, Joberty C, Fakiola M, Hudson D, Peacock CS, Cordell HJ, Shaw M-A, Lins-Lainson Z, Shaw JJ, Ramos F, Silveira F, Blackwell JM 2004. Genome-wide scans for leprosy and tuberculosis susceptibility genes in Brazilians. Genes Immun 5: 63-67.). However, this association between ERBB2 polymorphisms and leprosy was not replicated in a more heterogeneous population-based sample from RN. Given the larger sample size and thus the greater statistical power of this population-based study, the most parsimonious explanation for this failure to replicate the association is that the positive finding in PA sample is due to a type I error. However, the a priori observation of a linkage between the susceptibility to leprosy per se and the chromosome 17q11-q22 region in this family-based study suggests that polymorphisms at ERBB2 could be contributing to the linkage peak in this relatively small series of large multicase families with a small number of founders derived from a focused geographical location in Belém (Jamieson et al. 2004Jamieson SE, Miller EN, Black GF, Peacock CS, Cordell HJ, Howson JMM, Shaw M-A, Burgner D, Xu W, Lins-Lainson Z, Shaw JJ, Ramos F, Silveira F, Blackwell JM 2004. Evidence for a cluster of genes on chromosome 17q11-q21 controlling susceptibility to tuberculosis and leprosy in Brazilians. Genes Immun 5: 46-57., Miller et al. 2004Miller EN, Jamieson SE, Joberty C, Fakiola M, Hudson D, Peacock CS, Cordell HJ, Shaw M-A, Lins-Lainson Z, Shaw JJ, Ramos F, Silveira F, Blackwell JM 2004. Genome-wide scans for leprosy and tuberculosis susceptibility genes in Brazilians. Genes Immun 5: 63-67.). Indeed, ERBB2 lies directly under (i.e., within 700 kb of the top microsatellite marker in the linkage study) the linkage peak and is the most attractive candidate within this < 1 Mb region. However, it has yet to be determined whether ERBB2 contributes functionally to leprosy susceptibility or is being carried on larger chromosome haplotypes transmitted within these families. Certainly, the broader (~26-46 Mb) linkage peak across the chromosome 17q11-q22 region is rich in immune response genes (e.g., NOS2A, the CCL chemokine cluster, CSF3, THRA/ERBA1, CCR7, STAT5A/B, STAT3), multiple members of which could contribute to the linkage peak and could also act as candidate genes for leprosy susceptibility, as we demonstrated earlier for tuberculosis in this region of Brazil (Jamieson et al. 2004Jamieson SE, Miller EN, Black GF, Peacock CS, Cordell HJ, Howson JMM, Shaw M-A, Burgner D, Xu W, Lins-Lainson Z, Shaw JJ, Ramos F, Silveira F, Blackwell JM 2004. Evidence for a cluster of genes on chromosome 17q11-q21 controlling susceptibility to tuberculosis and leprosy in Brazilians. Genes Immun 5: 46-57.). Given estimates of linkage disequilibrium blocks for Caucasian and African populations (Gabriel et al. 2002Gabriel SB, Schaffner SF, Nguyen H, Moore JM, Roy J, Blumenstiel B, Higgins J, DeFelice M, Lochner A, Faggart M, Liu-Cordero SN, Rotimi C, Adeyemo A, Cooper R, Ward R, Lander ES, Daly MJ, Altshuler D 2002. The structure of haplotype blocks in the human genome. Science 296: 2225-2229.), fine mapping by association analysis at the population level is only likely to be detected to within < 150 kb. Therefore, the failure to replicate the association in a heterogeneous population-based sample might indicate that the gene contributing to leprosy susceptibility at chromosome 17q11-q22 in Brazil is not ERBB2 itself. Further genetic and functional studies will be required to characterise the role of genes on chromosome 17q11-q22 in the susceptibility to mycobacterial disease in Brazil. For the moment, however, the role of ERBB2 polymorphisms in determining the susceptibility to leprosy in Brazil remains ambiguous.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

To the people from PA and RN, for their contribution to this study, to Manoel Gomes Fernandes, for his assistance during the field studies in RN, and to Dr Lúcio L Medeiros, Dr Mércia Souza and Goretti Oliveira, for their help in the studies in Mossoró.

REFERENCES

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  • Berrington WR, Hawn TR 2007. Mycobacterium tuberculosis, macrophages and the innate immune response: does common variation matter? Immunol Rev 219: 167-186.
  • Blackwell JM, Black GF, Peacock CS, Miller EN, Sibthorpe D, Gnananandha D, Shaw JJ, Silveira F, Lins-Lainson Z, Ramos F, Collins A, Shaw M-A 1997. Immunogenetics of leishmanial and mycobacterial infections: the Belém family study. Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci 352: 1331-1345.
  • Cartel JL, Spiegel A, Ngoc LN, Moulia-Pelat JP, Martin PM, Grosset JH 1992. Leprosy in French Polynesia. The possible impact of multidrug therapy on epidemiological trends. Lepr Rev 63: 223-230.
  • Casanova JL, Abel L 2002. Genetic dissection of immunity to mycobacteria: the human model. Annu Rev Immunol 20: 581-620.
  • Cordell HJ, Barratt BJ, Clayton DG 2004. Case/pseudocontrol analysis in genetic association studies: a unified framework for detection of genotype and haplotype associations, gene-gene and gene-environment interactions and parent-of-origin effects. Genet Epidemiol 26: 167-185.
  • Fernando SL, Britton WJ 2006. Genetic susceptibility to mycobacterial disease in humans. Immunol Cell Biol 84: 125-137.
  • Fine PE 1983. Natural history of leprosy - aspects relevant to a leprosy vaccine. Int J Lepr Other Mycobact Dis 51: 553-555.
  • Frank B, Hemminki K, Wirtenberger M, Bermejo JL, Bugert P, Klaes R, Schmutzler RK, Wappenschmidt B, Bartram CR, Burwinkel B 2005. The rare ERBB2 variant Ile654Val is associated with an increased familial breast cancer risk. Carcinogenesis 26: 643-647.
  • Gabriel SB, Schaffner SF, Nguyen H, Moore JM, Roy J, Blumenstiel B, Higgins J, DeFelice M, Lochner A, Faggart M, Liu-Cordero SN, Rotimi C, Adeyemo A, Cooper R, Ward R, Lander ES, Daly MJ, Altshuler D 2002. The structure of haplotype blocks in the human genome. Science 296: 2225-2229.
  • Jamieson SE, Miller EN, Black GF, Peacock CS, Cordell HJ, Howson JMM, Shaw M-A, Burgner D, Xu W, Lins-Lainson Z, Shaw JJ, Ramos F, Silveira F, Blackwell JM 2004. Evidence for a cluster of genes on chromosome 17q11-q21 controlling susceptibility to tuberculosis and leprosy in Brazilians. Genes Immun 5: 46-57.
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  • Financial support: The Wellcome Trust (to JMB) and INCT-DT

Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    Mar 2014
  • Date of issue
    Apr 2014

History

  • Received
    28 June 2013
  • Accepted
    13 Nov 2013
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