ApoL1 and the Immune Response of Patients with Systemic Lupus Erythematosus.

Curr Rheumatol Rep

Division of Rheumatology, Department of Medicine, New York University School of Medicine, 550 First Avenue, MSB 611, New York, NY, 10016, USA.

Published: March 2017

Purpose Of Review: Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) confers up to a 50-fold increased risk of cardiovascular disease (CVD), and African Americans with SLE experience accelerated damage accrual and doubled cardiovascular risk when compared to their European American counterparts.

Recent Findings: Genome-wide association studies have identified a substantial signal at 22q13, now assigned to variation at apolipoprotein L1 (APOL1), which has associated with progressive nondiabetic nephropathy, cardiovascular disease, and many immune-associated renal diseases, including lupus nephritis. We contend that alterations in crucial APOL1 intracellular pathways may underpin associated disease states based on structure-functional differences between variant and ancestral forms. While ancestral APOL1 may be a key driver of autophagy, nonconserved primary structure changes result in a toxic gain of function with attenuation of autophagy and an unsupervised pore-forming feature. Thus, the divergent intracellular biological pathways of ancestral and variant APOL1 may explain a worsened prognosis as demonstrated in SLE.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s11926-017-0637-9DOI Listing

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