Background: Sarcoidosis is a multisystemic disorder of unknown etiology, characterised by the
presence of non-caseating granulomas in target organs. In ninety percent of cases, there is
thoracic involvement. Fifty to seventy percent of pulmonary sarcoidosis patients will experience
acute, self-limiting disease. For the subgroup of patients who develop persistent disease, no
targeted therapy is currently available.
Aim: To investigate the potential of the single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP), Toll-like
receptor 3 Leu412Phe (TLR3 L412F; rs3775291), as a causative factor in the development of,
and in disease persistence in pulmonary sarcoidosis. To investigate the functionality of TLR3
L412F in vitro in primary human lung fibroblasts from pulmonary sarcoidosis patients.
Methods: Cohorts of Irish sarcoidosis patients (n=228), healthy Irish controls (n = 263) and a
secondary cohort of American sarcoidosis patients (n=123) were genotyped for TLR3 L412F.
Additionally, the effect of TLR3 L412F in primary lung fibroblasts from pulmonary sarcoidosis patients was quantitated following TLR3 activation in the context of cytokine and type I interferon production, TLR3 expression, and apoptotic- and fibroproliferative-responses.
Results: We report a significant association between TLR3 L412F and persistent clinical disease in two cohorts of Irish and American Caucasians with pulmonary sarcoidosis. Furthermore, activation of TLR3 in primary lung fibroblasts from 412F-homozygous pulmonary sarcoidosis patients resulted in reduced IFN-â and TLR3 expression, reduced apoptosis- and dysregulated fibroproliferative-responses compared with TLR3 wild-type patients.
Conclusions: This study identifies defective TLR3 function as a previously unidentified factor in persistent clinical disease in pulmonary sarcoidosis and reveals TLR3 L412F as a candidate biomarker