Abstract

BackgroundMany aspects of autoimmune disease are not well understood, including the specificities of autoimmune targets, and patterns of co-morbidity and cross-heritability across diseases. Prior work has provided evidence that somatic mutation caused by gene conversion and deletion at segmentally duplicated loci is relevant to several diseases. Simple tandem repeat (STR) sequence is highly mutable, both somatically and in the germ-line, and somatic STR mutations are observed under inflammation.ResultsProtein-coding genes spanning STRs having markers of mutability, including germ-line variability, high total length, repeat count and/or repeat similarity, are evaluated in the context of autoimmunity. For the initiation of autoimmune disease, antigens whose autoantibodies are the first observed in a disease, termed primary autoantigens, are informative. Three primary autoantigens, thyroid peroxidase (TPO), phogrin (PTPRN2) and filaggrin (FLG), include STRs that are among the eleven longest STRs spanned by protein-coding genes. This association of primary autoantigens with long STR sequence is highly significant (). Long STRs occur within twenty genes that are associated with sixteen common autoimmune diseases and atherosclerosis. The repeat within the TTC34 gene is an outlier in terms of length and a link with systemic lupus erythematosus is proposed.ConclusionsThe results support the hypothesis that many autoimmune diseases are triggered by immune responses to proteins whose DNA sequence mutates somatically in a coherent, consistent fashion. Other autoimmune diseases may be caused by coherent somatic mutations in immune cells. The coherent somatic mutation hypothesis has the potential to be a comprehensive explanation for the initiation of many autoimmune diseases.

Highlights

  • I have previously provided evidence that somatic gene conversion and/or deletion in sequence harboring long segmental duplications is correlated with disease [1]

  • Using the Tandem Repeat Finder [63] (TMRF) track of the UCSC Genome Browser [64], I queried the database for proteincoding genes whose DNA sequence spans Simple tandem repeat (STR) sequence, and filtered the results as described in the Methods

  • The coherent somatic mutation hypothesis states that recurrent or clonal somatic mutation underlies the initiation of autoimmune disease

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Summary

Introduction

I have previously provided evidence that somatic gene conversion and/or deletion in sequence harboring long segmental duplications is correlated with disease [1]. According to this hypothesis, autoimmunity is a response to novel (somatically mutated) antigens. The remarkable extent of somatic mutation, including copy number variation and somatic mosaicism, has recently been elucidated, with several proposed links to neurological disease [4,5,6,7,8,9]. Prior work has provided evidence that somatic mutation caused by gene conversion and deletion at segmentally duplicated loci is relevant to several diseases. Simple tandem repeat (STR) sequence is highly mutable, both somatically and in the germ-line, and somatic STR mutations are observed under inflammation

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