AI Article Synopsis

  • Hereditary angioedema (HAE) is a serious condition linked to mutations in the C1 inhibitor gene, leading to variable symptoms even among affected family members.
  • Researchers investigated the potential influence of genetic variations in several genes (BDKR1, BDKR2, ACE, MBL2) on HAE in 36 unrelated patients and 69 patients overall, but found no significant impact on disease severity or attack characteristics.
  • The findings suggest that additional genetic and environmental factors may contribute to the clinical differences observed in HAE among Caucasian patients.

Article Abstract

Hereditary angiooedema (HAE) is a life-threatening disease with poor clinical phenotype correlation with its causal mutation in the C1 inhibitor (SERPING1) gene. It is characterized by substantial symptom variability even in affected members of the same family. Therefore, it is likely that genetic factors outside the SERPING1 gene have an influence on disease manifestation. In this study, functional polymorphisms in genes with a possible disease-modifying effect, B1 and B2 bradykinin receptors (BDKR1, BDKR2), angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) and mannose-binding lectin (MBL2), were analysed in 36 unrelated HAE patients. The same analysis was carried out in 69 HAE patients regardless of their familial relationship. No significant influence of the studied polymorphisms in the BDKR1, BDKR2, ACE and MBL2 genes on overall disease severity, localization and severity of particular attacks, frequency of oedema episodes or age of disease onset was detected in either group of patients. Other genetic and/or environmental factors should be considered to be responsible for HAE clinical variability in Caucasians.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-3083.2011.02547.xDOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • Hereditary angioedema (HAE) is a serious condition linked to mutations in the C1 inhibitor gene, leading to variable symptoms even among affected family members.
  • Researchers investigated the potential influence of genetic variations in several genes (BDKR1, BDKR2, ACE, MBL2) on HAE in 36 unrelated patients and 69 patients overall, but found no significant impact on disease severity or attack characteristics.
  • The findings suggest that additional genetic and environmental factors may contribute to the clinical differences observed in HAE among Caucasian patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

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