In order to assess the effect of the HLA region on familiality of coeliac disease (CD), we carried out a study on 121 CD index cases and 325 first degree relatives. The transmission disequilibrium test confirmed the importance of the HLA-DR3 haplotype in CD susceptibility. However, the different distortion found in affected children inheriting maternal or paternal DR3 alleles suggested that the sex of the parent might influence the risk conferred by this haplotype. The increase in risk to siblings of affected individuals relative to the risk in the general population (λ s ) and the contribution of the HLA genes to this clustering (λ sHLA ) have also been estimated. Non-overlapping data from the literature have been collected and combined with our sample to extend such analysis. Then, the percentage contribution of the HLA region to the development of CD among siblings was 36n2%. This result confirms that the HLA genotypes are an important genetic background to CD development but shows that additional susceptibility factors remain to be identified.
The involvement of HLA genes in the susceptibility to coeliac disease (CD) has been well documented and represents the only consistently observed genetic feature of this multifactorial disease. In the present study, the search for new susceptibility genes has been devoted to a candidate region suggested by the association of CD with Williams syndrome (WS). This genetic disorder is due to a deletion in the 7q11.23 region that includes the elastin (ELN) gene. An increased prevalence of CD in WS patients has been previously reported and a case of CD-WS is also described in the present study. We used the ELN17 microsatellite marker mapped within the ELN gene to look for a possible contribution of this region to the susceptibility to CD. The analysis of 74 Italian CD families provided no evidence of association with the ELN17 marker.
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