Characterization of two polymorphisms in the leukotriene C4 synthase gene in an Australian population of subjects with mild, moderate, and severe asthma


Autoria(s): Kedda, MA; Shi, J; Duffy, D; Phelps, S; Yang, I; O'Hara, K; Fong, K; Thompson, PJ
Contribuinte(s)

D. Y. M. Leung

Data(s)

01/01/2004

Resumo

Background: The cysteinyl-leukotrienes (cys-LTs) are proinflammatory mediators that are important in the pathophysiology of asthma. LTC4 synthase is a key enzyme in the cys-LT biosynthetic pathway, and studies in small populations have suggested that a promoter polymorphism (A(-444)C) in the gene might be associated with asthma severity and aspirin intolerance. Objective: We sought to screen the LTC4 synthase gene for polymorphisms and to determine whether there is an association between these polymorphisms and asthma severity or aspirin sensitivity in a large, well-phenotyped population and to determine whether this polymorphism is functionally relevant. Methods: The coding regions of the LTC4 synthase gene were screened for polymorphisms and the A(-444)C polymorphism was analyzed in a large Australian white adult population of mild (n = 282), moderate (n = 236), and severe asthmatic subjects (n = 86) and nonasthmatic subjects (n = 458), as well as in aspirin-intolerant asthmatic subjects (n = 67). The functional activity of the promoter polymorphism was investigated by transient transfection of HL-60 cells with a promoter construct. Results: A new polymorphism was identified in intron 1 of the gene (IVS1-10c>a) but was not associated with asthma. Association studies showed that the A(-444)C polymorphism was weakly associated with asthma per se, but there was no association between the C-444 allele and chronic asthma severity or aspirin intolerance. A meta-analysis of all the genetic studies conducted to date found significant between-study heterogeneity in C-444 allele frequencies within different clinical subgroups. In vitro functional studies showed no significant differences in transcription efficiency between constructs containing the A(-444) allele or the C-444 allele. Conclusions: Our data confirm that, independent of transcriptional activity, the C-444 allele in the LTC4 synthase gene is weakly associated with the asthma phenotype, but it is not related to disease severity or aspirin intolerance.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:77678

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Mosby

Palavras-Chave #Allergy #Immunology #Ltc4 Synthase #Asthma #Disease Severity #Aspirin Intolerant #Promoter Polymorphism #Australian Population #Aspirin-intolerant Asthma #Molecular-cloning #Clinical-response #Japanese Patients #Disease #Association #Susceptibility #Prevalence #5q35 #CX #320201 Allergy #730103 Blood disorders
Tipo

Journal Article