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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2016 Sep 1.
Published in final edited form as: Curr Opin Pulm Med. 2015 Sep;21(5):510–516. doi: 10.1097/MCP.0000000000000189

Granuloma genes in sarcoidosis – what's new?

Annegret Fischer 1,*, Benjamin A Rybicki 2
PMCID: PMC4569001  NIHMSID: NIHMS718799  PMID: 26164297

Abstract

Purpose of review

Non-necrotizing granulomas in the affected organ are the hallmark of sarcoidosis. This review summarizes most recent genetic findings in sarcoidosis with a focus on genes that might influence granuloma formation or resolution. Specific results in multiple ethnic groups and certain clinical subphenotypes, such as extra-pulmonary organ involvement, are discussed.

Recent findings

Associations of genetic variants in antigen-presenting molecules (HLA-DRB1) were shown to confer risk to sarcoidosis and certain disease phenotypes in populations of different ethnic origin. Specific DRB1 alleles, such as *0301 and *0302, appear to confer protection against chronic disease, but in an ethnic-specific manner illustrating the extensive genetic heterogeneity and complexity at this locus. Mechanistic studies of putative sarcoid antigens lend further credence to a role of HLA-DRB1 in disease pathogenesis. With relevance to granuloma formation, genes involved in apoptotic processes and immune cell activation were further confirmed (ANXA11 and BTNL2) in multiple ethnicities; others were newly identified (XAF1). Linking mechanism to clinical application, a TNF variant was shown to correlate with anti-TNF response in sarcoidosis patients.

Summary

The investigation of known and novel risk variants for sarcoidosis and specific clinical phenotypes in various ethnicities highlights the genetic complexity of the disease. Detailed subanalysis of disease phenotypes revealed the potential for prediction of extra-pulmonary organ involvement and therapy response based on the patient's genotype.

Keywords: HLA, apoptosis, prediction, antigens, clinical phenotype

Introduction

In the recent years, our knowledge on the genetic background of sarcoidosis has grown substantially due to modern technology allowing genome-wide association mapping and the investigation of large-size populations of different ethnicities. Many of these sarcoidosis risk variants are assumed to influence the formation of granulomatous structures in the affected organ, a hallmark of sarcoidosis pathogenesis. This review summarizes most recent genetic findings in sarcoidosis, with a focus on granuloma-relevant factors including HLA-alleles.

1. T cell activation through HLA-alleles

One important aspect in granuloma formation is the activation of T cells by antigen-presenting cells through a molecular interaction of the T cell receptors and antigen presenting molecules. The latter are genetically encoded in the HLA region on chromosome 6p21.3, which is characterized by extreme genetic diversity. Over 7000 specific combinations of HLA variants, so-called HLA-haplotype alleles, are known today 1. This great diversity evolved as an adaptation to disease pathogens, since allelic variation resulted in HLA molecules with different binding affinities for pathogenic targets. The world-wide distribution of HLA-alleles reflects migration patterns as well as pathogen-driven balancing selection (reviewed in 2). Until recently, the identification of HLA-alleles carried by an individual was costly, applying Sanger sequencing based typing. Imputation of HLA-alleles from genome-wide genotype data as well as next generation sequencing methods now allow for a higher-throughput HLA-typing at lower cost 3-5.

Certain HLA-alleles are well-known to influence susceptibility to sarcoidosis and disease course (reviewed in 6). Of those, HLA-DRB1-alleles confer the highest risks on the population level. An excerpt of known HLA-associations with sarcoidosis and its subphenotypes is given in Table 1, with a focus on risk alleles and recent reports comprising rather large study populations.

Table 1.

HLA-associations with sarcoidosis and its subphenotypes (LS: Löfgren syndrome; EPM: extra-pulmonary manifestation)

Locus Allele Phenotype OR Reference reporting association N with phenotype N without phenotype N controls Ethnicity/ Nation
HLA-B *51 LS 11.11 7 22 122 China
DQB1 *0201 LS 12.50 8 47 218 Dutch
*0201 LS 17.40 8 47 92 Dutch
DQB1 *0503/4 Sarcoidosis 2.55 8 340 354 UK
*0503/4 Lung sarcoidosis 2.80 8 233 354 UK
*0503/4 Lung sarcoidosis 4.40 8 78 218 Dutch
DRB1 *01 Resolving 2.44 9 325 399 Sweden
*11 Sarcoidosis 6.25 7 131 122 China
*11 EPM 0.36 10 39 52 Turkey
*1101 Sarcoidosis 1.98 11 474 474 Mixed US
*1101 Sarcoidosis 1.69 12 1277 1467 African Americans
*1101 Persistent 1.41 12 624 308 African Americans
*12 Sarcoidosis 3.71 8 340 354 UK
*12 Lung sarcoidosis 4.20 8 233 354 UK
*12 Lung sarcoidosis 5.30 8 37 168 Japan
*1201 Sarcoidosis 2.13 11 474 474 Mixed US
*1201 Sarcoidosis 2.06 12 1277 1467 African Americans
*14 Sarcoidosis 1.79 9 754 1366 Sweden
*1401/2 Sarcoidosis 2.54 8 340 354 UK
*1401/2 Lung sarcoidosis 2.70 8 233 354 UK
*15 Sarcoidosis 2.37 10 91 145 Turkey
*1501 Sarcoidosis 1.70 11 474 474 Mixed US
*1501 Sarcoidosis 1.67 13 188 150 Finland
*03 Resolving in LS 79.98 14 223 45 Sweden
*03 LS 12.50 8 47 218 Dutch
*03 LS 18.60 8 47 92 Dutch
*03 Sarcoidosis 1.91 9 754 1366 Sweden
*03 Resolving 5.42 9 325 1366 Sweden
*03 Resolving 2.22 9 325 399 Sweden
*03 Löfgren 6.71 9 302 1366 Sweden
*03 Sarcoid arthritis 3.17 15 39 544 Iceland
*0301 Resolving 2.22 13 90 98 Finland
*0301 Sarcoidosis 0.56 12 1277 1467 African Americans
*0302 Resolving 1.92 12 308 624 African Americans
*04 EPM in non-LS 2.35 16 257 360 Sweden
*04 Sarcoid arthritis 0.27 15 39 544 Iceland
*0803 Sarcoidosis 2.43 17 237 287 Japan

2. Diagnostic value of HLA information

Besides its functional role in the pathogenesis of sarcoidosis, HLA alleles have potential to aid clinical decisions with regards to sarcoidosis subphenotypes. Extra-thoracic manifestations as well as the course of the disease are associated with specific HLA alleles. For instance, variation at the HLA-DRB1 locus is associated with disease course 13, 18-22 and organ-specific involvement 8, 11 in sarcoidosis. Grunewald et al. demonstrated that 95% of *03-positive patients with Löfgren's syndrome experienced disease resolution within two years, whereas disease resolved for only half of *03-negative patients 14. Subsequent work by Grunewald and his group showed that DRB1*14 and DRB1*15 tended to increase the risk for a non-resolving disease, but DRB1*14 had a more pronounced effect on non-Löfgren syndrome patients, whereas DRB1*15 has a greater effect on Löfgren syndrome patients with DRB1*03 predominating over DRB1*15 in terms of increasing the likelihood of resolving disease 9. Interestingly, in a Han Chinese population, it was HLA-B*51, not DRB1*03, that most strongly associated with Löfgren syndrome 7, suggesting that the DRB1*03 association with acute disease may be specific to European populations.

Until recently, DRB1 associations with sarcoidosis phenotypes have never been evaluated in African Americans. Levin et al. examine DRB1 variation in the context of disease phenotype in 1,277 African Americans patients and 1,468 controls 12. They found that the DRB1*03:02 allele conferred a similar likelihood of resolving disease in African American sarcoidosis patients as *03:01-positivity does in Europeans 14. While the DRB1*03:01 allele is found less frequently in African Americans 11, the *03:02 allele could have similar clinical implications as the *03:01 allele in sarcoidosis patients of European ancestry 23. Since HLA genes are known to be inherited in haplotype blocks, information about the ancestral background at a HLA locus may include more than the risk effect of an allele at that locus. In analyses stratified by local ancestry Levin et al. found that the associations of HLA-DRB1*03:01 and *03:02 with susceptibility and DRB1*03:01 with persistent disease were dependent on local ancestry (European or African) at DRB1. Replication of DRB1*03:02 association with resolving disease in African American sarcoidosis patients is needed before any conclusions can made about its potential impact on disease course.

Levin et al. further showed carriage of DRB1*0301 decreased risk for extra-pulmonary manifestations of sarcoidosis in non-thoracic lymph nodes, eyes, skin and liver 12. Alternatively, carriage of DRB1*0302 increased risk for skin involvement in African American sarcoidosis patients. In a Scandinavian population, Darlington et al. showed that non-Löfgren syndrome sarcoidosis patients more frequently than Löfgren syndrome patients have extra-pulmonary involvement 16. While this in itself is not a novel finding, the investigators found unique associations with HLA-DRB1 alleles and risk of extra-thoracic disease manifestations depending upon Löfgren syndrome status. In Löfgren syndrome patients, DRB1*03 significantly decreased risk for extra-thoracic disease, but in non-Löfgren syndrome patients it was carriage of DRB1*11, *13, or *14 that decreased risk for extra-thoracic disease and carriage of DRB1*04 that increased risk for extra-thoracic disease.

As was discussed earlier, ethnicity clearly plays a role in HLA-DRB1 associations. This is further evidenced by the study of Ozyilmaz et al. who found DRB1*11 also significantly decreased risk for extra-thoracic disease in a Turkish population 10, in agreement with findings of Darlington et al. in Scandanavian non-Lofgren cases. A nation-wide study of tissue confirmed sarcoidosis in Iceland from 1981 to 2004 found several different significant associations between HLA alleles and sarcoid-related arthritis 15. HLA-B8 and –B14 were more common among those who suffered from sarcoid arthritis as was carriage of the HLA-DRB1*03 allele. Alternatively, the HLA-DRB1*04 allele was significantly less common in sarcoid arthritis sufferers. This is in contrast to the findings of Darlington et al. in terms of DRB1*04 increasing risk for extra-thoracic disease in Scandanavians. Sato et al. 8 showed that over 40 percent of English patients that suffer from sarcoid uveitis carry the DRB1*04 allele. The risk for uveitis for DRB1*04 carriers is even higher in the Japanese, but because this allele is much less frequent in the Japanese population, the vast majority of sarcoidosis uveitis patients carry other DRB1 alleles. In general, HLA genotype and predicting sarcoid organ involvement is confounded by ethnicity and the attendant genetic background.

3. HLA Class II antigens

Crucial for granuloma formation is the existence and the presentation of an antigen(s) that initiates this process. The class II molecules, such as HLA-DRB1, bind peptides on the surface of antigen-presenting cells, which are subsequently recognized by CD4+ T cells. The capacity of docking an antigenic peptide depends on genetically encoded polymorphic residues in the binding pockets 24, 25. Investigators have therefore performed studies to identify the sarcoidosis antigen(s) with a strong binding affinity to specific HLA class II DR epitopes.

In sarcoidosis, T cell-mediated immune responses to mycobacterial antigens have been shown to be dependent upon DRB1 genotype 26. In silico predictions of peptide binding affinities 27 can be used to predict which DRB1 allele/antigen combinations are likely to initiate the most robust immune response. For example, an in silico analysis found that patients with Löfgren's syndrome express HLA-DR alleles capable of binding a significantly higher number of bacterial epitopes than other HLA-DR alleles 28. Interestingly, DRB1*03:01, shows the highest predicted binding to M. tuberculosis epitopes 29. Given the affinity for *03:01 encoded epitopes to bind to M. tuberculosis-derived peptides, a potential model for exposure to this antigen involving effective clearance and subsequent self-limiting Löfgren's disease would seem very credible.

Mechanistic studies have provided additional insight into variation at the HLA class II loci and immune response to putative sarcoidosis antigens. ESAT-6 is a secretory protein and potent T cell antigen produced by M. tuberculosis. A high percentage of sarcoidosis patients appear to have been previously exposed to ESAT-6, as evidenced by a positive T-cell response to different ESAT-6 peptides 30. HLA-DRB1*1101 is a known sarcoidosis risk allele in both Europeans and African Americans 11. Oswald-Richter et al. showed that carriage of DRB1*1101 was strongly associated with a more robust Th1-response upon exposure to ESAT-6 in both European and African American sarcoidosis patients 26. These findings lay the ground work for gene-environment studies focused on HLA genotypes and targeted antigens known to elicit Th-1 immune responses observed in sarcoidosis.

Another similar line of mechanistic research has used patients that are positive for the HLA-DRB*03 genotype to study self-antigens that can sustain an inflammatory response in lungs. Wahlstrom et al. 31 used lung cells from 16 HLA-DRB1*0301-positive patients obtained by bronchoalveolar lavage and identified 78 amino acid sequences from self-proteins presented in the lungs of sarcoidosis patients, some of which were well-known auto-antigens such as vimentin and ATP synthase. Subsequent work by this same group examined the antigenic potential of these self-antigens, and found in peripheral blood that strong T cell responses to a peptide derived from the cytoskeletal protein vimentin was present in a majority of DRB1*0301 positive patients with active disease, but not in patients with other HLA types 32. While the importance of HLA-DRB1*0301 in acute sarcoidosis cannot be understated, given that most sarcoidosis patients are not DRB1*0301 positive, further work is need to better understand the antigens with high binding affinity to other sarcoid-DRB1 associated alleles that might subsequently stimulate an active immune response.

4. Other granuloma-promoting genetic factors

Genome-wide genetic screening approaches revealed a number of novel susceptibility factors for sarcoidosis, some of which are very likely to affect granuloma formation. A splicing variant in the BTNL2 gene had first been reported with regards to sarcoidosis by Valentonyte et al. in a German study sample 33. The protein functions as a negative co-stimulator in T cell activation. In mice, it was shown that BTNL2 controls mucosal inflammation by promoting FOXP3 expression and thereby the development of regulatory T cells 34. The genetic association of the BTNL2 variant with sarcoidosis has been confirmed in various populations, including African Americans and Japanese 17, 35-41. Most recently, the association was confirmed in a Greek population of 146 sarcoidosis patients and 90 controls 42. Sequencing of the coding and neighboring intronic regions of the BTNL2 gene in these individuals revealed the existence of 37 different variants, of which 12 were synonymous and 25 non-synonymous substitutions. Thirteen of the 37 variants were predicted to affect gene function, including four yet unknown variants. In light of the small sample size in this study, it remains to be elucidated, whether one or several of these variants confer additional independent genetic effects.

Annexin 11 is a protein is involved in the regulation of apoptosis 43 and might influence the stability of sarcoid granulomas. Based on a genome-wide association study (GWAS), variants in the ANXA11 gene which codes for Annexin 11 were found to be associated with sarcoidosis 44 and confirmed in independent populations of German, Czech, Portuguese and European and African American origin 37, 45-48. Evidence has recently been substantiated by a report on ANXA11 variants being associated in a Han Chinese population of 412 patients and 418 healthy controls 49. In a tagging-SNP approach Feng et al. investigated 29 high frequency SNPs (MAF > 0.2) in the ANXA11 gene region and found significant differences in the allele frequency for three variants. Consecutive multi-SNP modeling showed that the non- synonymous SNP rs1049550 (R230C) completely explains this association, while rs2789679 and rs2819941 did not represent independent signals in this population.

In a sarcoidosis admixture linkage scan, nine regions were suggested to be linked to either West African or European ancestry 50. Most recently, a refined analysis of those regions by Levin et al. showed the most significant sarcoidosis admixture linkage to a non-HLA loci on chromosome 17p13.1-13.3 could be explained by one SNP, rs6502976, that accounted for the majority of the admixture linkage signal in the region 51. SNP rs6502976 is located in intron 5 of the XAF1 gene region and is suggested to influence transcriptional expression of XAF1, which is a negative regulator of XIAP. The XIAP/XAF1 pathway is known to be involved in apoptotic mechanisms. For sarcoidosis, a differential expression patterns of XAF1 and XIAP in granulomas suggest that this pathway may play a role in granuloma maintenance 51. Due to its novelty, this genetic finding now awaits replication in independent study populations and further functional exploration.

Most thoroughly investigated in candidate gene studies on sarcoidosis, the tumor necrosis factor (TNF) gene encodes a well-known pro-inflammatory cytokine that acts on macrophage activation, promotion of cellular migration towards the site of inflammation and leukocyte adhesion (reviewed in 52). Further, TNF is targeted in sarcoidosis therapy by TNF-antibodies, such as infliximab or adalimumab. Summarizing twelve sarcoidosis case-control studies, a very recent meta-analysis including 3,218 participants highlighted the TNF-308G/A variant being associated in populations of Asian and Caucasian ethnicity and in sarcoidosis with Löfgren syndrome 53, with the A allele conferring increased risk. Regarding the clinically important subphenotype of cardiac sarcoidosis, a very recent publication in a Greek population of 173 patients reported the A allele being significantly associated 54. This is in line with a long-standing finding in Japanese sarcoidosis patients 55. The same polymorphism was reported to correlate with the response to TNF-inhibitor treatment 56. Wijnen et al. followed 111 patients receiving TNF-inhibitor treatment for at least one year. They found that for patients with the GG-genotype, the probability of improving compared with remaining stable or deteriorating was three times higher (risk ratio = 3.09) than in carriers of the A allele. In case of a successful replication, we expect that this finding will be of high importance in clinical management.

Granuloma formation in sarcoidosis might be influenced by a number of additional risk variants, e.g. in the IL23R and NOTCH4 gene regions or in genes encoding toll-like receptors. However since these findings had been reported and reviewed previously 6, they will not be discussed in detail here.

5. Conclusion

Granuloma formation in sarcoidosis is a complex phenomenon that is most likely influenced by genetic sarcoidosis risk factors in several aspects. As illustrated by this review, antigen presentation (HLA-DRB1), immune cell activation (BTNL2, TNF, IL23R) and regulation of apoptosis (ANXA11, XAF1) might be key players. As demonstrated for HLA class II associations, further investigation of subclassifications of disease phenotypes may provide deeper insights into genetically determined mechanisms that steer the disease pathophysiology down a certain pathway – including the interaction of multiple genes in a pathway - hopefully leading to more targeted and effective disease therapies. While studies of multiple ethnic groups increases the complexity of sarcoidosis genetics, they at the same time can help us to better understand the underlying genetic heterogeneity of certain disease phenotypes. The challenge that lies ahead is teasing apart the genetic heterogeneities that exist across ethnic groups to make a more complete picture of the genetic landscape of this disease and to understand its role in disease pathogenesis. This knowledge can be applied in the upcoming era of precision medicine where a patient's genotype will be an important determinant of his or her treatment strategies.

Key points.

  • Granulomatous processes in sarcoidosis are assumed to be influenced by genetic risk factors at the level of antigen-presentation (HLA class II genes), immune cell activation (TNF, BTNL2, IL23R) and apoptosis (ANXA11, XAF1).

  • Genetic associations in sarcoidosis are partly phenotype-specific and depend on the ethnic background of an individual.

  • Variants in granuloma-relevant genes may be applied for the prediction of disease phenotype and therapy response in sarcoidosis.

Acknowledgements

We would like to thank all study participants who contributed to our sarcoidosis research investigations and colleagues who shared their ideas and devotion to sarcoidosis research that can move us closer to eliminating the suffering from this enigmatic disease.

Financial support and sponsorship

This work was supported by the German Research Foundation (grant FI1935/1-1) and National Institutes of Health (grant R01HL113326).

Footnotes

Conflicts of interest

No conflict of interest exists.

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