|
|
 |
Welcome to the website of the
Southwest Virginia MS Support Group
|
 |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Multiple Sclerosis and Genetics

Increasing scientific evidence suggests that genetics may
play a role in determining a person's susceptibility to
MS. Some populations, such as Gypsies, Eskimos, and
Bantus, never get MS. Native Indians of North and South
America, the Japanese, and other Asian peoples have very
low incidence rates. It is unclear whether this is due
mostly to genetic or environmental factors.
In the population at large, the chance of developing MS is
less than a tenth of one percent. However, if one person
in a family has MS, that person's first-degree relatives
parents, children, and siblings have a one to three
percent chance of getting the disease.
For identical twins, the likelihood that the second twin
may develop MS if the first twin does is about 30 percent;
for fraternal twins (who do not inherit identical gene
pools), the likelihood is closer to that for non-twin
siblings, or about 4 percent. The fact that the rate for
identical twins both developing MS is significantly less
than 100 percent suggests that the disease is not entirely
genetically controlled. Some (but definitely not all) of
this effect may be due to shared exposure to something in
the environment, or to the fact that some people with MS
lesions remain essentially asymptomatic throughout
their lives.
Further indications that more than one gene is involved in
MS susceptibility comes from studies of families in which
more than one member has MS. Several research teams found
that people with MS inherit certain regions on individual
genes more frequently than people without MS. Of
particular interest is the human leukocyte antigen
(HLA) or major histocompatibility complex
region on chromosome 6. HLAs are genetically determined
proteins that influence the immune system.
The HLA patterns of MS patients tend to be different from
those of people without the disease. Investigations in
northern Europe and America have detected three HLAs that
are more prevalent in people with MS than in the general
population. Studies of American MS patients have shown
that people with MS also tend to exhibit these HLAs in
combination—that is, they have more than one of the three
HLAs—more frequently than the rest of the population.
Furthermore, there is evidence that different combinations
of the HLAs may correspond to variations in disease
severity and progression.
Studies of families with multiple cases of MS and research
comparing genetic regions of humans to those of mice with
EAE suggest that another area related to MS susceptibility
may be located on chromosome 5. Other regions on
chromosomes 2, 3, 7, 11, 17, 19, and X have also been
identified as possibly containing genes involved in the
development of MS.
These studies strengthen the theory that MS is the result
of a number of factors rather than a single gene or other
agent. Development of MS is likely to be influenced by the
interactions of a number of genes, each of which
(individually) has only a modest effect. Additional
studies are needed to specifically pinpoint which genes
are involved, determine their function, and learn how each
gene's interactions with other genes and with the
environment make an individual susceptible to MS. In
addition to leading to better ways to diagnose MS, such
studies should yield clues to the underlying causes of MS
and, eventually, to better treatments or a way to prevent
the disease.
|
|
|
|
|
|