Scientists Identify Gene For Familial Mediterranean Fever
July, 2003 from http://www.pslgroup.com/dg/357da.htm
WASHINGTON, MD -- August 22, 1997 -- An international
consortium of researchers, led by investigators at the National Institute
of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases (NIAMS), has for the first
time identified the gene for familial Mediterranean fever (FMF) and found
three different gene mutations that cause this inherited rheumatic disease.
The gene holds the code for making a protein the researchers
call pyrin. They hypothesize that pyrin normally plays a role in keeping
inflammation under control, and that mutations in the gene lead to a malfunctioning
protein and uncontrolled inflammation.
Discovery of the gene mutations, published in today’s issue
of Cell,* "will allow immediately a simple diagnostic blood test for FMF,"
says lead researcher Daniel L. Kastner, M.D., Ph.D. "One reason that’s important
is that in the U.S. physicians are often unfamiliar with FMF. Now it will
be possible to develop a simple diagnostic test for FMF that could be used
in patients with unexplained, recurring fevers," says Kastner, who heads
a lab in the Arthritis and Rheumatism Branch at the NIAMS -- part of the
National Institutes of Health (NIH), in Bethesda, Md.
Researchers hope that studying how pyrin works will ultimately
lead to new, improved treatments for FMF and perhaps for other diseases involving
excess inflammation.
People with FMF suffer from recurring bouts of fever, most
commonly with severe abdominal pain due to inflammation of the abdominal
cavity (peritonitis). Attacks can also include arthritis (painful, swollen
joints), chest pain from inflammation of the lung cavity (pleurisy), and
skin rashes. Some patients develop amyloidosis, a potentially deadly buildup
of protein in vital organs such as the kidneys.
The only treatment for FMF is a drug called colchicine,
which patients have to take every day for life and which causes side effects
such as diarrhea and abdominal cramps.
FMF occurs most commonly in people of non-Ashkenzi Jewish,
Armenian, Arab and Turkish background living in the United States and abroad.
As many as 1 in 200 people in these populations have the disease, and as
many as one in five to one in seven carry a mutated FMF gene. A person must
inherit two mutated copies of the gene -- one from each parent -- in order
to get FMF.
Kastner’s research group identified the gene for FMF after
years of searching, with the collaboration of researchers from four other
U.S. groups, including the National Human Genome Research Institute at NIH,
as well as investigators from Israel and Australia.
In their quest for the disease gene, the researchers analyzed
genetic material from people in 62 families with FMF, most of them recruited
through clinics in Tel Aviv and Los Angeles. Out of the three FMF gene mutations
identified so far in these families, the same two mutations are found in
ethnic populations that have been geographically separated for over 2,000
years, suggesting that most individuals with the disease are descended from
a small, ancient group of individuals.
The three gene mutations found to date lead to changes in
the same region near one end of the protein, suggesting that this region
is critical to pyrin’s function. Computer analyses done by the researchers
show that the gene mutations in FMF lead to an alteration in the shape of
the pyrin protein. This shape change presumably interferes with pyrin’s normal
functioning.
The pyrin protein, named from the Greek word for fire, bears
a strong resemblance to several proteins found in the nucleus of cells. Some
of these proteins are known to regulate inflammation. Kastner and colleagues
found that the FMF gene is decoded to make the protein only in white blood
cells called peripheral blood leukocytes, which are the first line of the
body’s defense system in an infection or after certain other challenges to
the body. In attacks of FMF, these leukocytes rush into the affected part
of the body in massive numbers, triggering inflammation -- a typical response
of tissues to injury or disease that is characterized by redness, swelling,
heat and pain.
The researchers think that pyrin may normally act as a switch
to shut down or dampen the inflammatory reaction. In FMF, Kastner hypothesizes,
"this switch is not working quite right, so that even if you get a small
provocation you can end up getting a strong inflammatory response, whereas
in normal people the protein would [eventually] shut down this response."
This over-reaction leads to disease symptoms such as fever and excessive
inflammation.
The fact that mutations in the FMF gene are so common in
several Middle Eastern populations suggests that people with only one mutated
FMF gene -- who are carriers for the disease but do not have FMF -- may have
some type of survival advantage. For example, says Kastner, they may have
an increased resistance to one or more disease-causing organisms, perhaps
ones that are very common in the Mediterranean region.
Kastner and colleagues have results suggesting that one
particular mutation tends to be associated with more severe disease. “It
may be that as we start to understand these mutations one could determine
a bit more about the prognosis of a given individual, based on their specific
mutation,” Kastner says.
If doctors could identify those people at high risk for
developing amyloidosis, the potentially fatal complication of FMF, they could
make sure that those patients stayed on their medication and could in many
cases prevent development of amyloidosis. Many patients choose to stop taking
colchicine for various reasons, including the drug’s side effects.
One intriguing finding from these studies is the evidence
that FMF mutations date back to Biblical times. The evidence for this is
partly historical, says Kastner, and comes from comparing populations known
to have been geographically separated for long periods of time. For example,
some members of the Iraqi Jewish population have the same FMF gene mutation
as the North African Jewish population. This suggests the mutation arose
in some common ancestors of these two groups before they separated about
2,500 years ago.
Historical interests aside, identifying the genetic cause
of FMF is in some ways just the beginning of the story. The researchers now
must pursue work such as looking at the minority of patients in whom they
have not yet found mutations, and studying the pyrin protein to better understand
the role it plays under normal circumstances and in people with FMF.
“The longer-term payoff [of this work] is in terms of therapeutics,”
Kastner says. “Eventually understanding this protein [pyrin] or proteins
in this same pathway might give rise to a new class of anti- inflammatory
drugs.”
The National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal
and Skin Diseases leads the Federal biomedical research effort on rheumatic
diseases by conducting and supporting research projects, research training,
clinical trials, and epidemiologic studies, and through dissemination of
health information and research results.
Portions of this work were supported by the Arthritis Foundation,
the Cedars-Sinai Board of Governors (Los Angeles, Calif.), the U.S. Department
of Energy, and the National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia.
*The International FMF Consortium. "Ancient missense mutations
in a new member of the RoRet gene family cause familial Mediterranean fever."
Cell 90:797-807, August 22, 1997.