Japanese Journal of Clinical Immunology
Online ISSN : 1349-7413
Print ISSN : 0911-4300
ISSN-L : 0911-4300
Review Articles
Is rheumatoid arthritis without anti-citrullinated peptide antibody a genetically distinct subset?
Koichiro OHMURA
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2009 Volume 32 Issue 6 Pages 484-491

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Abstract
  These days, rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is reported to be subclassified into two subsets by anti-citrullinated peptide antibody (ACPA) positivity. Clinically, ACPA positive RA tends to develop more severe arthritis than ACPA negative RA. In addition, a lot of reported susceptibility genes to RA (ie. HLA-DRB1*04, PTPN22, TRAF1/C5, CTLA4) are found to be associated only with ACPA positive RA but not with ACPA negative RA. It is getting clear that HLA-DRB1*04, which was believed to be primarily associated with RA, is not a primary risk factor but ACPA is. Then, a hypothesis for the disease mechanism of ACPA positive RA is set as follows; citrullination possibly due to smoking, etc, provokes ACPA production in individuals who have susceptibility alleles of genes including HLA, followed by joint inflammation in autoantibody-dependent manner. The search for susceptibility genes for ACPA negative RA is slowly progressing, but only a few genes are so far reported: HLA-DRB1*03 for Caucasian, HLA-DRB1*09 for Japanese, IRF5 and STAT4. When we investigate the disease mechanisms of RA, we should manage independently the two disease subsets : ACPA positive and ACPA negative RA.
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© 2009 The Japan Society for Clinical Immunology
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