Abstract

Uveitis is a generic term for inflammation of the uvea, which includes the iris, ciliary body, and choroid. Prevalence of underlying non-infectious uveitis varies by race and region and is a major cause of legal blindness in developed countries. Although the etiology remains unclear, the involvement of both genetic and environmental factors is considered important for the onset of many forms of non-infectious uveitis. Major histocompatibility complex (MHC) genes, which play a major role in human immune response, have been reported to be strongly associated as genetic risk factors in several forms of non-infectious uveitis. Behçet’s disease, acute anterior uveitis (AAU), and chorioretinopathy are strongly correlated with MHC class I-specific alleles. Moreover, sarcoidosis and Vogt-Koyanagi-Harada (VKH) disease are associated with MHC class II-specific alleles. These correlations can help immunogenetically classify the immune pathway involved in each form of non-infectious uveitis. Genetic studies, including recent genome-wide association studies, have identified several susceptibility genes apart from those in the MHC region. These genetic findings help define the common or specific pathogenesis of ocular inflammatory diseases by comparing the susceptibility genes of each form of non-infectious uveitis. Interestingly, genome-wide association of the interleukin (IL)23R region has been identified in many of the major forms of non-infectious uveitis, such as Behçet’s disease, ocular sarcoidosis, VKH disease, and AAU. The interleukin-23 (IL-23) receptor, encoded by IL23R, is expressed on the cell surface of Th17 cells. IL-23 is involved in the homeostasis of Th17 cells and the production of IL-17, which is an inflammatory cytokine, indicating that a Th17 immune response is a common key in the pathogenesis of non-infectious uveitis. Based on the findings from the immunogenetics of non-infectious uveitis, a personalized treatment approach based on the patient’s genetic make-up is expected.

Highlights

  • Uvea is the middle layer of three concentric layers of the eye, including the iris, ciliary body, and choroid

  • A systematic review and meta-analysis including 4,800 patients and 16,289 controls from 78 independent studies reported the pooled odds ratio for the susceptibility of HLAB5/HLA-B51 and HLA-B*51, 5.78 (95% confidence interval [CI], 5.00–6.67) and 5.90, respectively

  • Several genes identified thereafter were genes involved in innate immunity [26, 27]. These findings indicate that abnormalities in multiple immune pathways intricately contribute to each disease pathogenesis

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Uvea is the middle layer of three concentric layers of the eye, including the iris, ciliary body, and choroid. We describe immunogenetics of non-infectious uveitis elucidated by genetic analysis focusing on genome-wide association studies (GWASs). In 2017, Takeuchi et al, conducted a large-scale genetic analysis, including 3,477 patients and 3,342 controls from Turkish, Japanese, and Iranian populations using the Immunochip (Illumina), which has 200,000 markers designed from previous GWASs of other immune-related diseases. This dense genotyping of immune-related loci identified six novel loci, IL1A-IL1B, RIPK2, ADO-EGR2, LACC1, IRF8, and CEBPBPTPN1 [26].

1.14 African American
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