Abstract

Pemphigus is a group of autoimmune bullous skin diseases that result in significant morbidity. As for other multifactorial autoimmune disorders, environmental factors may trigger the disease in genetically susceptible individuals. The goals of this review are to summarize the state of knowledge about the genetic variation that may affect the susceptibility and pathogenesis of pemphigus vulgaris and pemphigus foliaceus – both the endemic and the sporadic forms –, to compare and discuss the possible meaning of the associations reported, and to propose recommendations for new research initiatives. Understanding how genetic variants translate into pathogenic mechanisms and phenotypes remains a mystery for most of the polymorphisms that contribute to disease susceptibility. However, genetic studies provide a strong foundation for further developments in this field by generating testable hypotheses. Currently, results still have limited influence on disease prevention and prognosis, drug development, and clinical practice, although the perspectives for future applications for the benefit of patients are encouraging. Recommendations for the continued advancement of our understanding as to the impact of genetic variation on pemphigus include these partially overlapping goals: (1) Querying the functional effect of genetic variants on the regulation of gene expression through their impact on the nucleotide sequence of cis regulatory DNA elements such as promoters and enhancers, the splicing of RNA, the structure of regulatory RNAs and proteins, binding of these regulatory molecules to regulatory DNA elements, and alteration of epigenetic marks; (2) identifying key cell types and cell states that are implicated in pemphigus pathogenesis and explore their functional genomes; (3) integrating structural and functional genomics data; (4) performing disease-progression longitudinal studies to disclose the causal relationships between genetic and epigenetic variation and intermediate disease phenotypes; (5) understanding the influence of genetic and epigenetic variation in the response to treatment and the severity of the disease; (6) exploring gene-gene and genotype-environment interactions; (7) developing improved pemphigus-prone and non-prone animal models that are appropriate for research about the mechanisms that link genotypes to pemphigus. Achieving these goals will demand larger samples of patients and controls and multisite collaborations.

Highlights

  • Pemphigus is a group of autoimmune skin diseases of unclear etiology, characterized by epidermal blisters and erosions in the stratified squamous epithelium affecting the skin and/or mucous membranes

  • Exacerbated effector responses to HSP70s are associated with autoimmune disease (AD). These findings demonstrate a complex relationship between autoimmunity and AD: natural autoimmunity to HSP70 is associated with health, whereas altered autoimmunity to HSP70 is related to disease

  • Despite the successful identification of several genes and regulatory elements involved in pemphigus pathogenesis, knowledge in that field is still fragmentary, especially for pemphigus vulgaris (PV)

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Summary

Introduction

Pemphigus is a group of autoimmune skin diseases of unclear etiology, characterized by epidermal blisters and erosions in the stratified squamous epithelium affecting the skin and/or mucous membranes. In central and southern Tunisia, the yearly incidence of pemphigus was estimated at 6.7 cases per million and year, of which 61% were PF, women living in rural areas, with a female:male ratio of 4.1 (Bastuji-Garin et al, 1995). The complex genetic background does not suffice for disease outbreak; exposure to ill-defined precipitating environmental factors is required. These may differ between subjects and are related to their lifestyle. Soon after the development of medium- to high-resolution typing at the DNA level in the 1980s, it was thought that the “true” associations with individual alleles would be discovered, facilitating understanding of the mechanisms governing susceptibility/resistance to pemphigus and other HLA associated diseases. The HLA molecules have pleiotropic effects, as illustrated by the func-

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