Familial Rheumatoid Arthritis: Linkage of HLA to Disease
Susceptibility Locus in Four Families Where Proband Presented with
Juvenile Rheumatoid Arthritis
R.D. Rossen, E.J. Brewer, R.M. Sharp, J. Ott, J.W. Templeton
Journal of Clinical Investigation , 65(3), 629--642
(1980 Mar)
Abstract
The occurrence of a chronic seronegative polyarthritis has been
studied in four families in which the proband presented with some
form of juvenile rheumatoid arthritis. In these families,
histocompatibility testing suggested that susceptibility to
arthritis was controlled by a dominant allele with variable
penetrance and expressivity at the rheumatoid-like arthritis, first
locus (RLA-1). The combined lod scores for the four families (2.70)
indicated that the odds in favor of genetic linkage between the
major histocompatibility complex and the postulated disease
susceptibility gene, RLA-1, were 500:1. In one family, a recombinant
event permitted localization of RLA-1 centromeric to HLA-D. Of major
interest was the fact that there was significant pleomorphism in the
clinical manifestations of arthritis in affected individuals. In
some, symptoms first occurred in childhood and in others, in adult
life. Even among those with childhood-onset arthritis, different
types of juvenile rheumatoid arthritis were observed within the same
family. [References: 51]