The Relation Between NOD2/CARD15 Mutations and the Prevalence and Phenotypic Heterogeneity of Crohn’s Disease: Lessons from the Israeli Arab Crohn’s Disease Cohort
- 1 September 2005
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Digestive Diseases and Sciences
- Vol. 50 (9) , 1692-1697
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s10620-005-2917-x
Abstract
The prevalence of Crohn's disease depends on geographic location and racial background. Arg702Trp, Gly908Arg, and Leu1007fsinsC mutations in the NOD2/CARD15 gene are associated with Crohn's disease in Caucasians. The mutation rate among Israeli Jewish patients is 27%-41%. The prevalence of Crohn's disease is much lower in the Israeli Arab compared to the Israeli Jewish population. We studied the NOD2/CARD15 mutation rate and disease phenotype (according to the Vienna classification) among the Israeli Arabs and compared them with those in an Israeli Jewish cohort. We recruited 66 Israeli Arab patients and 122 ethnically matched controls. Five patients (8.2%) and three controls (2.3%) carried one NOD2/CARD15 mutation. The phenotypic characteristics of the Arab and Jewish patients were very similar. We conclude that NOD2/CARD15 mutations do not contribute to Crohn's susceptibility in the Israeli Arab population and suggest that NOD2/CARD15 mutations have an important effect on Crohn's prevalence within a specific population but not on the phenotype.Keywords
This publication has 50 references indexed in Scilit:
- NOD2/CARD15, TLR4 and CD14 mutations in Scottish and Irish Crohn's disease patients: evidence for genetic heterogeneity within Europe?Genes & Immunity, 2004
- NOD2/CARD15 gene polymorphisms in Crohn's diseaseEuropean Journal of Gastroenterology & Hepatology, 2004
- Y-Chromosome DNA Haplotypes in Jews: Comparisons with Lebanese and PalestiniansGenetic Testing, 2003
- A Novel NOD2/CARD15 Haplotype Conferring Risk for Crohn Disease in Ashkenazi JewsAmerican Journal of Human Genetics, 2003
- Haplotype structure and association to Crohn's disease of CARD15 mutations in two ethnically divergent populationsEuropean Journal of Human Genetics, 2003
- Absence of mutation in the NOD2/CARD15 gene among 483 Japanese patients with Crohn's diseaseJournal of Human Genetics, 2002
- CROHN'S DISEASE IN THE HUNTER VALLEY REGION OF AUSTRALIAAnz Journal of Surgery, 1995
- Involvement of capsaicin-sensitive neurons in gastrin release provoked by intragastric administration of bile salts in the ratThe Esophagus, 1995
- Incidence of inflammatory bowel disease in northern France (1988-1990).Gut, 1994
- Crohn's disease in the Kinneret sub-district, Israel, 1960–1990European Journal of Epidemiology, 1994