Authors
I Jeru, P Duquesnoy, T Fernandes-Alnemri, E Cochet, JW Yu, M Lackmy-Port-Lis, E Grimprel, J Landman-Parker, V Hentgen, S Marlin, K McElreavey, T Sarkisian, G Grateau, ES Alnemri, S Amselem
Publication date
2008/2/5
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Volume
105
Issue
5
Pages
1614-1619
Publisher
National Academy of Sciences
Description
NALP proteins, also known as NLRPs, belong to the CATERPILLER protein family involved, like Toll-like receptors, in the recognition of microbial molecules and the subsequent activation of inflammatory and immune responses. Current advances in the function of NALPs support the recently proposed model of a disease continuum bridging autoimmune and autoinflammatory disorders. Among these diseases, hereditary periodic fevers (HPFs) are Mendelian disorders associated with sequence variations in very few genes; these variations are mostly missense mutations whose deleterious effect, which is particularly difficult to assess, is often questionable. The growing number of identified sporadic cases of periodic fever syndrome, together with the lack of discriminatory clinical criteria, has greatly hampered the identification of new disease-causing genes, a step that is, however, essential for appropriate …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
I Jeru, P Duquesnoy, T Fernandes-Alnemri, E Cochet… - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2008