Abstract

The aim of this study was to test for genetic linkage and association between polymorphisms of the angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) gene and familial occurrence of sarcoidosis. German families with more than one member suffering from sarcoidosis were contacted and a DNA bank was established. Sixty-two families (140 patients, 77 females and 63 males, and 104 unaffected relatives) were genotyped for the ACE gene insertion/deletion (I/D) polymorphism and for two flanking variable sites (ACE A-5466C and ACE 4656(CT)2/3). As controls, 100 DNAs from unrelated resident Caucasians (50 females, 50 males) were analysed. ACE allele and genotype frequencies were determined, and parametric linkage and affected sib pair analyses and transmission disequilibrium tests were performed. There was a striking over-representation of the ACE I/D genotype DD in patients with sarcoidosis and their families as compared with controls of the study and well founded genotype frequencies from the literature. The same was evident for the accompanying genotypes CC and 2,2 of the flanking polymorphisms. Linkage between the segregation of ACE alleles and the disorder within families was clearly excluded for simple models of inheritance. However, there was a suggestive but not significant (P = 0.06) excess of allele sharing amongst affected siblings. There was no transmission disequilibrium for any ACE allele or haplotype. ACE is involved in the pathogenesis of sarcoidosis, but the ACE polymorphisms are not an inherited main cause of the disease. They are more likely to modify the development of the disorder, and the ACE I/D genotype DD might be a promoter to clinical manifestation.

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