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Dive into the research topics where Daniel L. Kastner is active.

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Featured researches published by Daniel L. Kastner.


Cell | 1997

Ancient missense mutations in a new member of the RoRet gene family are likely to cause Familial Mediterranean Fever

Ivona Aksentijevich; Michael Centola; Zuoming Deng; Raman Sood; James E. Balow; Geryl Wood; Nurit Zaks; Elizabeth Mansfield; Xiangmei Chen; S. Eisenberg; Anil Vedula; Neta Shafran; Nina Raben; Elon Pras; M. Pras; Daniel L. Kastner; Trevor Blake; Ad Baxevanis; C. Robbins; David B. Krizman; Francis S. Collins; Pu Paul Liu; Xuejun Chen; M. Shohat; M. Hamon; T. L. Kahan; A. Cercek; J. I. Rotter; N. FischelGhodsian; N. Richards

Familial Mediterranean fever (FMF) is a recessively inherited disorder characterized by dramatic episodes of fever and serosal inflammation. This report describes the cloning of the gene likely to cause FMF from a 115-kb candidate interval on chromosome 16p. Three different missense mutations were identified in affected individuals, but not in normals. Haplotype and mutational analyses disclosed ancestral relationships among carrier chromosomes in populations that have been separated for centuries. The novel gene encodes a 3.7-kb transcript that is almost exclusively expressed in granulocytes. The predicted protein, pyrin, is a member of a family of nuclear factors homologous to the Ro52 autoantigen. The cloning of the FMF gene promises to shed light on the regulation of acute inflammatory responses.Familial Mediterranean fever (FMF) is a recessively inherited disorder characterized by dramatic episodes of fever and serosal inflammation. This report describes the cloning of the gene likely to cause FMF from a 115-kb candidate interval on chromosome 16p. Three different missense mutations were identified in affected individuals, but not in normals. Haplotype and mutational analyses disclosed ancestral relationships among carrier chromosomes in populations that have been separated for centuries. The novel gene encodes a 3.7-kb transcript that is almost exclusively expressed in granulocytes. The predicted protein, pyrin, is a member of a family of nuclear factors homologous to the Ro52 autoantigen. The cloning of the FMF gene promises to shed light on the regulation of acute inflammatory responses.


Cell | 1999

Germline Mutations in the Extracellular Domains of the 55 kDa TNF Receptor, TNFR1, Define a Family of Dominantly Inherited Autoinflammatory Syndromes

Michael F. McDermott; Ivona Aksentijevich; Jérôme Galon; Elizabeth McDermott; B. William Ogunkolade; Michael Centola; Elizabeth Mansfield; Massimo Gadina; Leena Karenko; Tom Pettersson; John McCarthy; David M. Frucht; Martin Aringer; Yelizaveta Torosyan; Anna-Maija Teppo; Meredith Wilson; H.Mehmet Karaarslan; Ying Wan; Ian Todd; Geryl Wood; Ryan Schlimgen; Thisum R. Kumarajeewa; Sheldon M. Cooper; John P. Vella; Christopher I. Amos; John C. Mulley; Kathleen A. Quane; Michael G. Molloy; Annamari Ranki; Richard J. Powell

Autosomal dominant periodic fever syndromes are characterized by unexplained episodes of fever and severe localized inflammation. In seven affected families, we found six different missense mutations of the 55 kDa tumor necrosis factor receptor (TNFR1), five of which disrupt conserved extracellular disulfide bonds. Soluble plasma TNFR1 levels in patients were approximately half normal. Leukocytes bearing a C52F mutation showed increased membrane TNFR1 and reduced receptor cleavage following stimulation. We propose that the autoinflammatory phenotype results from impaired downregulation of membrane TNFR1 and diminished shedding of potentially antagonistic soluble receptor. TNFR1-associated periodic syndromes (TRAPS) establish an important class of mutations in TNF receptors. Detailed analysis of one such mutation suggests impaired cytokine receptor clearance as a novel mechanism of disease.


Nature Genetics | 2010

Genome-wide association study meta-analysis identifies seven new rheumatoid arthritis risk loci

Eli A. Stahl; Soumya Raychaudhuri; Elaine F. Remmers; Gang Xie; Stephen Eyre; Brian Thomson; Yonghong Li; Fina Kurreeman; Alexandra Zhernakova; Anne Hinks; Candace Guiducci; Robert Chen; Lars Alfredsson; Christopher I. Amos; Kristin Ardlie; Anne Barton; John Bowes; Elisabeth Brouwer; Noël P. Burtt; Joseph J. Catanese; Jonathan S. Coblyn; Marieke J. H. Coenen; Karen H. Costenbader; Lindsey A. Criswell; J. Bart A. Crusius; Jing Cui; Paul I. W. de Bakker; Philip L. De Jager; Bo Ding; Paul Emery

To identify new genetic risk factors for rheumatoid arthritis, we conducted a genome-wide association study meta-analysis of 5,539 autoantibody-positive individuals with rheumatoid arthritis (cases) and 20,169 controls of European descent, followed by replication in an independent set of 6,768 rheumatoid arthritis cases and 8,806 controls. Of 34 SNPs selected for replication, 7 new rheumatoid arthritis risk alleles were identified at genome-wide significance (P < 5 × 10−8) in an analysis of all 41,282 samples. The associated SNPs are near genes of known immune function, including IL6ST, SPRED2, RBPJ, CCR6, IRF5 and PXK. We also refined associations at two established rheumatoid arthritis risk loci (IL2RA and CCL21) and confirmed the association at AFF3. These new associations bring the total number of confirmed rheumatoid arthritis risk loci to 31 among individuals of European ancestry. An additional 11 SNPs replicated at P < 0.05, many of which are validated autoimmune risk alleles, suggesting that most represent genuine rheumatoid arthritis risk alleles.


Annual Review of Immunology | 2009

Horror Autoinflammaticus: The Molecular Pathophysiology of Autoinflammatory Disease*

Seth L. Masters; Anna Simon; Ivona Aksentijevich; Daniel L. Kastner

The autoinflammatory diseases are characterized by seemingly unprovoked episodes of inflammation, without high-titer autoantibodies or antigen-specific T cells. The concept was proposed ten years ago with the identification of the genes underlying hereditary periodic fever syndromes. This nosology has taken root because of the dramatic advances in our knowledge of the genetic basis of both mendelian and complex autoinflammatory diseases, and with the recognition that these illnesses derive from genetic variants of the innate immune system. Herein we propose an updated classification scheme based on the molecular insights garnered over the past decade, supplanting a clinical classification that has served well but is opaque to the genetic, immunologic, and therapeutic interrelationships now before us. We define six categories of autoinflammatory disease: IL-1beta activation disorders (inflammasomopathies), NF-kappaB activation syndromes, protein misfolding disorders, complement regulatory diseases, disturbances in cytokine signaling, and macrophage activation syndromes. A system based on molecular pathophysiology will bring greater clarity to our discourse while catalyzing new hypotheses both at the bench and at the bedside.


The New England Journal of Medicine | 2009

An Autoinflammatory Disease with Deficiency of the Interleukin-1–Receptor Antagonist

Ivona Aksentijevich; Seth L. Masters; Polly J. Ferguson; Paul Dancey; Joost Frenkel; Annet van Royen-Kerkhoff; Ron Laxer; Ulf Tedgård; Edward W. Cowen; Tuyet-Hang Pham; Matthew G. Booty; Jacob D. Estes; Netanya G. Sandler; Nicole Plass; Deborah L. Stone; Maria L. Turner; Suvimol Hill; Rayfel Schneider; Paul Babyn; Hatem El-Shanti; Elena Pope; Karyl S. Barron; Xinyu Bing; Arian Laurence; Chyi-Chia R. Lee; Dawn Chapelle; Gillian I. Clarke; Kamal Ohson; Marc Nicholson; Massimo Gadina

BACKGROUND Autoinflammatory diseases manifest inflammation without evidence of infection, high-titer autoantibodies, or autoreactive T cells. We report a disorder caused by mutations of IL1RN, which encodes the interleukin-1-receptor antagonist, with prominent involvement of skin and bone. METHODS We studied nine children from six families who had neonatal onset of sterile multifocal osteomyelitis, periostitis, and pustulosis. Response to empirical treatment with the recombinant interleukin-1-receptor antagonist anakinra in the first patient prompted us to test for the presence of mutations and changes in proteins and their function in interleukin-1-pathway genes including IL1RN. RESULTS We identified homozygous mutations of IL1RN in nine affected children, from one family from Newfoundland, Canada, three families from The Netherlands, and one consanguineous family from Lebanon. A nonconsanguineous patient from Puerto Rico was homozygous for a genomic deletion that includes IL1RN and five other interleukin-1-family members. At least three of the mutations are founder mutations; heterozygous carriers were asymptomatic, with no cytokine abnormalities in vitro. The IL1RN mutations resulted in a truncated protein that is not secreted, thereby rendering cells hyperresponsive to interleukin-1beta stimulation. Patients treated with anakinra responded rapidly. CONCLUSIONS We propose the term deficiency of the interleukin-1-receptor antagonist, or DIRA, to denote this autosomal recessive autoinflammatory disease caused by mutations affecting IL1RN. The absence of interleukin-1-receptor antagonist allows unopposed action of interleukin-1, resulting in life-threatening systemic inflammation with skin and bone involvement. (ClinicalTrials.gov number, NCT00059748.)


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2005

Replication of Putative Candidate-Gene Associations with Rheumatoid Arthritis in >4,000 Samples from North America and Sweden: Association of Susceptibility with PTPN22, CTLA4, and PADI4

Robert M. Plenge; Leonid Padyukov; Elaine F. Remmers; Shaun Purcell; Annette Lee; Elizabeth W. Karlson; Frederick Wolfe; Daniel L. Kastner; Lars Alfredsson; David Altshuler; Peter K. Gregersen; Lars Klareskog; John D. Rioux

Candidate-gene association studies in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) have lead to encouraging yet apparently inconsistent results. One explanation for the inconsistency is insufficient power to detect modest effects in the context of a low prior probability of a true effect. To overcome this limitation, we selected alleles with an increased probability of a disease association, on the basis of a review of the literature on RA and other autoimmune diseases, and tested them for association with RA susceptibility in a sample collection powered to detect modest genetic effects. We tested 17 alleles from 14 genes in 2,370 RA cases and 1,757 controls from the North American Rheumatoid Arthritis Consortium (NARAC) and the Swedish Epidemiological Investigation of Rheumatoid Arthritis (EIRA) collections. We found strong evidence of an association of PTPN22 with the development of anti-citrulline antibody-positive RA (odds ratio [OR] 1.49; P=.00002), using previously untested EIRA samples. We provide support for an association of CTLA4 (CT60 allele, OR 1.23; P=.001) and PADI4 (PADI4_94, OR 1.24; P=.001) with the development of RA, but only in the NARAC cohort. The CTLA4 association is stronger in patients with RA from both cohorts who are seropositive for anti-citrulline antibodies (P=.0006). Exploration of our data set with clinically relevant subsets of RA reveals that PTPN22 is associated with an earlier age at disease onset (P=.004) and that PTPN22 has a stronger effect in males than in females (P=.03). A meta-analysis failed to demonstrate an association of the remaining alleles with RA susceptibility, suggesting that the previously published associations may represent false-positive results. Given the strong statistical power to replicate a true-positive association in this study, our results provide support for PTPN22, CTLA4, and PADI4 as RA susceptibility genes and demonstrate novel associations with clinically relevant subsets of RA.


Journal of Experimental Medicine | 2011

Mitochondrial reactive oxygen species promote production of proinflammatory cytokines and are elevated in TNFR1-associated periodic syndrome (TRAPS)

Ariel C. Bulua; Anna Katharina Simon; Ravikanth Maddipati; Martin Pelletier; Heiyoung Park; Kye-Young Kim; Michael N. Sack; Daniel L. Kastner; Richard M. Siegel

ROS generated by mitochondrial respiration are needed for optimal proinflammatory cytokine production in healthy cells, and are elevated in cells from patients with an autoinflammatory disorder.


Nature Genetics | 2008

Common variants at CD40 and other loci confer risk of rheumatoid arthritis

Soumya Raychaudhuri; Elaine F. Remmers; Annette Lee; Rachel Hackett; Candace Guiducci; Noël P. Burtt; Lauren Gianniny; Benjamin D. Korman; Leonid Padyukov; Fina Kurreeman; Monica Chang; Joseph J. Catanese; Bo Ding; Sandra Wong; Annette H. M. van der Helm-van Mil; Benjamin M. Neale; Jonathan S. Coblyn; Jing Cui; Paul P. Tak; Gert Jan Wolbink; J. Bart A. Crusius; Irene E. van der Horst-Bruinsma; Lindsey A. Criswell; Christopher I. Amos; Michael F. Seldin; Daniel L. Kastner; Kristin Ardlie; Lars Alfredsson; Karen H. Costenbader; David Altshuler

To identify rheumatoid arthritis risk loci in European populations, we conducted a meta-analysis of two published genome-wide association (GWA) studies totaling 3,393 cases and 12,462 controls. We genotyped 31 top-ranked SNPs not previously associated with rheumatoid arthritis in an independent replication of 3,929 autoantibody-positive rheumatoid arthritis cases and 5,807 matched controls from eight separate collections. We identified a common variant at the CD40 gene locus (rs4810485, P = 0.0032 replication, P = 8.2 × 10−9 overall, OR = 0.87). Along with other associations near TRAF1 (refs. 2,3) and TNFAIP3 (refs. 4,5), this implies a central role for the CD40 signaling pathway in rheumatoid arthritis pathogenesis. We also identified association at the CCL21 gene locus (rs2812378, P = 0.00097 replication, P = 2.8 × 10−7 overall), a gene involved in lymphocyte trafficking. Finally, we identified evidence of association at four additional gene loci: MMEL1-TNFRSF14 (rs3890745, P = 0.0035 replication, P = 1.1 × 10−7 overall), CDK6 (rs42041, P = 0.010 replication, P = 4.0 × 10−6 overall), PRKCQ (rs4750316, P = 0.0078 replication, P = 4.4 × 10−6 overall), and KIF5A-PIP4K2C (rs1678542, P = 0.0026 replication, P = 8.8 × 10−8 overall).


American Journal of Human Genetics | 2001

A Genomewide Screen in Multiplex Rheumatoid Arthritis Families Suggests Genetic Overlap with Other Autoimmune Diseases

Damini Jawaheer; Michael F. Seldin; Christopher I. Amos; Wei Chen; Russell Shigeta; Joanita Monteiro; Marlene Kern; Lindsey A. Criswell; Salvatore Albani; J. Lee Nelson; Daniel O. Clegg; Richard M. Pope; Harry W. Schroeder; S. Louis Bridges; David S. Pisetsky; Ryk Ward; Daniel L. Kastner; Ronald L. Wilder; Theodore Pincus; Leigh F. Callahan; Donald Flemming; Mark H. Wener; Peter K. Gregersen

Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is an autoimmune/inflammatory disorder with a complex genetic component. We report the first major genomewide screen of multiplex families with RA gathered in the United States. The North American Rheumatoid Arthritis Consortium, using well-defined clinical criteria, has collected 257 families containing 301 affected sibling pairs with RA. A genome screen for allele sharing was performed, using 379 microsatellite markers. A nonparametric analysis using SIBPAL confirmed linkage of the HLA locus to RA (P < .00005), with lambdaHLA = 1.79. However, the analysis also revealed a number of non-HLA loci on chromosomes 1 (D1S235), 4 (D4S1647), 12 (D12S373), 16 (D16S403), and 17 (D17S1301), with evidence for linkage at a significance level of P<.005. Analysis of X-linked markers using the MLOD method from ASPEX also suggests linkage to the telomeric marker DXS6807. Stratifying the families into white or seropositive subgroups revealed some additional markers that showed improvement in significance over the full data set. Several of the regions that showed evidence for nominal significance (P < .05) in our data set had previously been implicated in RA (D16S516 and D17S1301) or in other diseases of an autoimmune nature, including systemic lupus erythematosus (D1S235), inflammatory bowel disease (D4S1647, D5S1462, and D16S516), multiple sclerosis (D12S1052), and ankylosing spondylitis (D16S516). Therefore, genes in the HLA complex play a major role in RA susceptibility, but several other regions also contribute significantly to overall genetic risk.


Nature Genetics | 2010

Genome-wide association study identifies variants in the MHC class I, IL10, and IL23R-IL12RB2 regions associated with Behcet's disease

Elaine F. Remmers; Fulya Cosan; Yohei Kirino; Michael J. Ombrello; Neslihan Abaci; Colleen Satorius; Julie M. Le; Barbara Yang; Benjamin D. Korman; Aris Cakiris; Oznur Aglar; Zeliha Emrence; Hulya Azakli; Duran Ustek; Ilknur Tugal-Tutkun; Gulsen Akman-Demir; Wei-Wei Chen; Christopher I. Amos; Michael Dizon; Afet Akdağ Köse; Gülsevim Azizlerli; Burak Erer; Oliver J. Brand; Virginia G. Kaklamani; Phaedon G. Kaklamanis; Eldad Ben-Chetrit; Miles Stanford; Farida Fortune; Marwen Ghabra; William Ollier

Behçets disease is a genetically complex disease of unknown etiology characterized by recurrent inflammatory attacks affecting the orogenital mucosa, eyes and skin. We performed a genome-wide association study with 311,459 SNPs in 1,215 individuals with Behçets disease (cases) and 1,278 healthy controls from Turkey. We confirmed the known association of Behçets disease with HLA-B*51 and identified a second, independent association within the MHC Class I region. We also identified an association at IL10 (rs1518111, P = 1.88 × 10−8). Using a meta-analysis with an additional five cohorts from Turkey, the Middle East, Europe and Asia, comprising a total of 2,430 cases and 2,660 controls, we identified associations at IL10 (rs1518111, P = 3.54 × 10−18, odds ratio = 1.45, 95% CI 1.34–1.58) and the IL23R-IL12RB2 locus (rs924080, P = 6.69 × 10−9, OR = 1.28, 95% CI 1.18–1.39). The disease-associated IL10 variant (the rs1518111 A allele) was associated with diminished mRNA expression and low protein production.

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Ivona Aksentijevich

National Institutes of Health

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Elaine F. Remmers

National Institutes of Health

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Jae Jin Chae

National Institutes of Health

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Qing Zhou

National Institutes of Health

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Michael J. Ombrello

National Institutes of Health

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Amanda K. Ombrello

National Institutes of Health

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Deborah L. Stone

National Institutes of Health

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Geryl Wood

National Institutes of Health

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Karyl S. Barron

National Institutes of Health

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