Ontology highlight
ABSTRACT:
SUBMITTER: Magerus-Chatinet A
PROVIDER: S-EPMC3007148 | biostudies-literature | 2011 Jan
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
Magerus-Chatinet Aude A Neven Bénédicte B Stolzenberg Marie-Claude MC Daussy Cécile C Arkwright Peter D PD Lanzarotti Nina N Schaffner Catherine C Cluet-Dennetiere Sophie S Haerynck Filomeen F Michel Gérard G Bole-Feysot Christine C Zarhrate Mohammed M Radford-Weiss Isabelle I Romana Serge P SP Picard Capucine C Fischer Alain A Rieux-Laucat Frédéric F
The Journal of clinical investigation 20101222 1
Autoimmune diseases develop in approximately 5% of humans. They can arise when self-tolerance checkpoints of the immune system are bypassed as a consequence of inherited mutations of key genes involved in lymphocyte activation, survival, or death. For example, autoimmune lymphoproliferative syndrome (ALPS) results from defects in self-tolerance checkpoints as a consequence of mutations in the death receptor-encoding gene TNF receptor superfamily, member 6 (TNFRSF6; also known as FAS). However, s ...[more]