989 resultados para Amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP)
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Studies have shown that estrogen replacement therapy and estrogen plus progestin replacement therapy alter serum levels of total, LDL and HDL cholesterol levels. However, HDL cholesterol levels in women vary considerably in response to hormone replacement therapy (HRT). A significant portion of the variability of these levels has been attributed to genetic factors. Therefore, we investigated the influence of estrogen receptor-alpha (ESR1) gene polymorphisms on HDL levels in response to postmenopausal HRT. We performed a prospective cohort study on 54 postmenopausal women who had not used HRT before the study and had no significant general medical illness. HRT consisted of conjugated equine estrogen and medroxyprogesterone acetate continuously for 1 year. The lipoprotein levels were measured from blood samples taken before the start of therapy and after 1 year of HRT. ESR1 polymorphism (MspI C>T, HaeIII C>T, PvuII C>T, and XbaI A>G) frequencies were assayed by restriction fragment length polymorphism. A general linear model was used to describe the relationships between HDL levels and genotypes after adjusting for age. A significant increase in HDL levels was observed after HRT (P = 0.029). Women with the ESR1 PvuII TT genotype showed a statistically significant increase in HDL levels after HRT (P = 0.032). No association was found between other ESR1 polymorphisms and HDL levels. According to our results, the ESR1 PvuII TT genotype was associated with increased levels of HDL after 1 year of HRT.
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The functional effect of the A>G transition at position 2756 on the MTR gene (5-methyltetrahydrofolate-homocysteine methyltransferase), involved in folate metabolism, may be a risk factor for head and neck squamous cell carcinoma (HNSCC). The frequency of MTR A2756G (rs1805087) polymorphism was compared between HNSCC patients and individuals without history of neoplasias. The association of this polymorphism with clinical histopathological parameters was evaluated. A total of 705 individuals were included in the study. The polymerase chain reaction-restriction fragment length polymorphism technique was used to genotype the polymorphism. For statistical analysis, the chi-square test (univariate analysis) was used for comparisons between groups and multiple logistic regression (multivariate analysis) was used for interactions between the polymorphism and risk factors and clinical histopathological parameters. Using univariate analysis, the results did not show significant differences in allelic or genotypic distributions. Multivariable analysis showed that tobacco and alcohol consumption (P < 0.05), AG genotype (P = 0.019) and G allele (P = 0.028) may be predictors of the disease and a higher frequency of the G polymorphic allele was detected in men with HNSCC compared to male controls (P = 0.008). The analysis of polymorphism regarding clinical histopathological parameters did not show any association with the primary site, aggressiveness, lymph node involvement or extension of the tumor. In conclusion, our data provide evidence that supports an association between the polymorphism and the risk of HNSCC.
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Recent animal studies have indicated that overexpression of the elongation of long-chain fatty acids family member 6 (Elovl6) gene can cause insulin resistance and β-cell dysfunction. These are the major factors involved in the development of type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). To identify the relationship between single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) ofELOVL6 and T2DM pathogenesis, we conducted a case-control study of 610 Han Chinese individuals (328 newly diagnosed T2DM and 282 healthy subjects). Insulin resistance and islet first-phase secretion function were evaluated by assessment of insulin resistance in a homeostasis model (HOMA-IR) and an arginine stimulation test. Three SNPs of the ELOVL6 gene were genotyped with polymerase chain reaction-restriction fragment length polymorphism, with DNA sequencing used to confirm the results. Only genotypes TT and CT of the ELOVL6 SNP rs12504538 were detected in the samples. Genotype CC was not observed. The T2DM group had a higher frequency of the C allele and the CT genotype than the control group. Subjects with the CT genotype had higher HOMA-IR values than those with the TT genotype. In addition, no statistical significance was observed between the genotype and allele frequencies of the control and T2DM groups for SNPs rs17041272 and rs6824447. The study indicated that the ELOVL6 gene polymorphism rs12504538 is associated with an increased risk of T2DM, because it causes an increase in insulin resistance.
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Im Rahmen der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde eine detaillierte phylogenetische Analyse der Ameisenpflanzen aus der Gattung Macaranga (Euphorbiaceae) und ihres verwandtschaftlichen Umfelds mit Hilfe von AFLP-Fingerprinting („amplified fragment length polymorphisms“) sowie vergleichender Analyse von mehreren nichtkodierenden Chloroplasten-DNA-Loci vorgenommen. Anhand dieser Untersuchungen sollten im Wesentlichen die folgenden Fragen geklärt werden: (1) Wie stellen sich die Verwandtschaftsverhältnisse zwischen den myrmekophytischen Macaranga-Sektionen Pachystemon, Winklerianae und Pruinosae dar? (2) Wie sind die einzelnen Arten dieser Sektionen miteinander verwandt? (3) Wie oft ist die Lebensweise ”Myrmekophytie” unabhängig voneinander entstanden? Gibt es Hinweise auf Reversionen? (4) Wo liegt genealogisch und auch geographisch der Ursprung der Symbiose zwischen den myrmekophytischen Macaranga-Arten und ihren Partnerameisen? (5) Welche Bedeutung spielen koevolutive Entwicklungen für das Macaranga-Crematogaster-Symbiosesystem? Ist Myrmekophytie im Sinne einer Schlüsselinnovation (Givnish, 1997) als Stimulus für eine adaptive Radiation zu betrachten? (1) Für die AFLP-Analyse wurden 108 Proben aus 43 Macaranga-Arten und 5 unbeschriebenen Morphospezies in die phylogenetische Untersuchung einbezogen. Auf der Basis von 426 Merkmalen wurden Phänogramme sowie Kladogramme rekonstruiert. Zur statistischen Absicherung wurden Bootstrap-Analysen durchgeführt und im Falle der Kladogramme darüber hinaus der „consistency“-Index bestimmt. Die AFLP-Datensätze wurden zusätzlich einer Hauptkomponentenanalyse unterzogen. Mit Hilfe der verschiedenen Untersuchungsmethoden konnten weitgehend übereinstimmende Gruppierungen bzw. evolutive Linien identifiziert werden. Die Sektionen Pachystemon und Pruinosae bilden eine jeweils gut gestützte monophyletische Gruppe. Beide sind vermutlich Schwestergruppen und damit gleich alt. Für die Monophylie der nur aus zwei Arten bestehenden Sektion Winklerianae ergab sich keine Unterstützung. Die Arten der Sektion Pruinosae sind im AFLP-Baum gut aufgelöst. Die nicht myrmekophytische M. gigantea sitzt dabei an der Basis und ist Schwestergruppe zu den myrmekophytischen Arten. Innerhalb der Sektion Pachystemon wurden mit Hilfe der AFLP-Analyse vier gut gestützte Gruppen identifiziert. Für die puncticulata-Gruppe konnte hier erstmals auf molekularer Ebene eine Zugehörigkeit zur Sekt. Pachystemon nachgewiesen werden. Der von Davies (2001) vorgenommene Ausschluss von M. recurvata aus der Sekt. Pachystemon konnte bestätigt werden. Die Verwandtschaftsbeziehungen einzelner Arten zueinander sind in den AFLP-Bäumen nicht aufgelöst. (2) Für die vergleichende Chloroplasten-Sequenzierung wurden nach Maßgabe der Sequenzvariabilität in Testsequenzierungen die Bereiche atpB-rbcL und psbI-trnS für die phylogenetische Untersuchung ausgewählt. Für die Chloroplasten-Phylogenie wurden für jeden Locus mehr als 100 Sequenzen analysiert. Neben 29 Pachystemon-Arten inkl. vier unbekannter Morphospezies, acht Pruinosae-Arten inkl. eines möglichen Hybriden und den beiden Arten der Sekt. Winklerianae wurden 22 weitere Macaranga- und 10 Mallotus-Arten in die Untersuchung einbezogen. Zwischen den südostasiatischen Arten bestanden nur geringe Sequenzunterschiede. Maximum-Parsimonie-Kladogramme wurden rekonstruiert und die Sequenzen der beiden Loci wurden sowohl einzeln, als auch kombiniert ausgewertet. Indels wurden kodiert und als separate Merkmalsmatrix an die Sequenzdaten angehangen. Innerhalb von Macaranga konnten nur wenige abgesicherte Gruppen identifiziert werden. Deutlich war die Zusammengehörigkeit der afrikanischen Arten und ihr Entstehung aus den südostasiatischen Arten. Die von Davies (2001) der Sektion Pruinosae zugeordnete M. siamensis steht deutlich außerhalb dieser Sektion. Die Arten der Sektionen Pruinosae, Pachystemon und Winklerianae bilden keine statistisch gesicherten monophyletischen Gruppen. Während der Pilotstudien stellte sich heraus, dass die Chloroplastensequenzen nahe verwandter Arten der Sektion Pachystemon weniger nach den Artgrenzen, sondern vielmehr nach geographischen Kriterien gruppierten. (3) Es wurde daher zusätzlich eine phylogeographische Analyse der Chloroplasten-Sequenzen auf der Basis eines Parsimonie-Netzwerks durchgeführt. Neben dem atpB-rbcL-Spacer und einer Teilsequenze des psbI-trnS-Locus (ccmp2) wurde dafür zusätzlich der ccmp6-Locus (ein Abschnitt des ycf3-Introns) sequenziert. Die phylogeographische Untersuchung wurde mit 144 Proben aus 41 Macaranga-Arten durchgeführt. Darin enthalten waren 29 Arten (inkl. vier Morphospezies) mit 112 Proben der Sektion Pachystemon, sieben 7 Arten (inkl. eines potentiellen Hybriden) mit 22 Proben der Sekt. Pruinosae und zwei Arten mit 5 Proben der Sekt. Winklerianae. Das voll aufgelöste statistische Parsimonie-Netzwerk umfasste 88 Haplotypen. Die Sektionen Pachystemon und Pruinosae bilden jeweils eine monophyletische Gruppe. Das geographische Arrangement der Haplotypen unabhängig von der Artzugehörigkeit könnte durch Introgression und/oder „lineage sorting“ bedingt sein. Mit Hilfe der im Rahmen dieser Arbeit gewonnenen Ergebnisse kann man davon ausgehen, dass eine enge Ameisen-Pflanzen-Symbiose innerhalb der Gattung Macaranga mindestens drei-, möglicherweise viermal unabhängig voneinander entstanden ist Eine Reversion hat mindestens einmal, möglicherweise häufiger in der bancana-Gruppe stattgefunden. Ob sich die Symbiose dabei in Westmalaysia oder in Borneo entwickelt hat, kann man nicht sicher sagen; Ob und inwieweit die große Artenzahl in der bancana-Gruppe als eine Folge der Myrmekophytie anzusehen ist, bleibt zunächst offen. Wesentliche Teile der vorliegenden Arbeit liegen bereits in publizierter Form vor (AFLP-Analyse: Bänfer et al. 2004; Chloroplasten-Analyse: Vogel et al. 2003; Bänfer et al. 2006).
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Die tropischen Anden sind eines der artenreichsten Gebiete der Erde. Fast die Hälfte der 45.000 in diesem Gebiet vorkommenden Gefäßpflanzenarten sind in den Anden endemisch (Myers et al. 2000). Die Gattung Fosterella (Bromeliaceae) ist eine den Anden zugeordnete Pflanzengruppe, denn die meisten ihrer 31 Arten kommen in den Anden vor. Achtzehn Arten sind kleinräumige Endemiten. Fosterella hat damit Modellcharakter für diese Region. In der vorliegenden Arbeit wurde die Evolution der Gattung in Raum und Zeit mithilfe der vergleichenden Sequenzierung von sechs plastidären Loci (atpB-rbcL, matK, psbB-psbH, rpl32-trnL, rps16-trnK, rps16-Intron) und einem nukleären Marker (PHYC) untersucht. Es wurden über 90 Akzessionen von 24 Fosterella-Arten untersucht. Mit 5,6 % informativer Merkmale innerhalb der Gattung war rpl32-trnL der informativste Chloroplastenmarker. Es wurden mit den kombinierten Sequenzdaten eine Maximum Parsimony-, eine Maximum Likelihood- und eine Bayes´sche Analyse berechnet. Weiterhin wurden biogeographische und ultrametrische Untersuchungen durchgeführt. Die 6-Locus-Phylogenie zeigt eine Aufteilung der monophyletischen Gattung Fosterella in sechs Gruppen, von denen vier – die penduliflora-, weddelliana-, weberbaueri- und micrantha-Gruppe - klar monophyletisch und gut gestützt sind. Die albicans- und die rusbyi-Gruppe bilden hingegen einen Komplex. Ultrametrische Analysen legen ein Alter der Gattung von ca. 9,6 Mio. Jahren nahe. Der geographische Ursprung von Fosterella befindet sich nach den vorliegenden biogeographischen Analysen in den Anden und nach der Biom-Analyse zu gleicher Wahrscheinlichkeit entweder in andinen Trockenwäldern (seasonally dry tropical forests, SDTFs) oder in azonalen Standorten des amazonischen Tieflands östlich der Anden. Es gab mehrere Ausbreitungsereignisse, von denen die beiden Fernausbreitungsereignisse nach Mittelamerika (F. micrantha) und in das zentrale Amazonasgebiet (F. batistana) die auffälligsten sind. Die feuchten Bergregenwälder (Yungas) der Anden wurden offenbar mehrfach unabhängig von Fosterella-Arten besiedelt. Insgesamt wurden elf nukleäre Marker (XDH, GS, RPB2, MS, ADH, MS, GLO/PI, CHS, FLO/LFY, NIAi3 und PHYC) auf ihre Anwendbarkeit für molekularsystematische Studien in Fosterella getestet. Davon konnten acht Marker erfolgreich mithilfe einer PCR amplifiziert werden. Die Fragmentgrößen lagen zwischen 350 bp und 1.500 bp. Nur für drei Loci (FLO/LFY, NIAi3 und PHYC) konnten lesbare DNA-Sequenzen in Fosterella erzeugt werden. FLO/LFY zeigte nur 1,5 % Variabilität innerhalb der Gattung. Der NIA-Locus erzeugte bei der Amplifikation mehrere Fragmente, die separat voneinander sequenziert wurden. Der Locus PHYC konnte hingegen aufgrund der guten Amplifizier- und Sequenzierbarkeit für das gesamte Probenset sequenziert werden. Dieser Marker zeigte eine Variabilität innerhalb der Gattung von 10,2 %, davon waren 6,8 % informativ. In der Phylogenie basierend auf PHYC ist Fosterella klar monophyletisch, innerhalb der Gattung zeigt sich jedoch an der Basis eine unaufgelöste Polytomie. Es lassen sich neun mehr oder weniger gut gestützte Artengruppen definieren – rusbyi-, villosula-, albicans-, weddelliana-, penduliflora-, weberbaueri-, micrantha-, robertreadii- und spectabilis-Gruppe - die sich in ihrer Zusammensetzung mit Ausnahme der weddelliana-Gruppe von den nach Chloroplastendaten definierten Gruppen unterscheiden. Viele Arten sind para- oder polyphyletisch, so z. B. F. albicans, F. penduliflora und F. rusbyi. Bei den beiden erstgenannten Arten weisen die unterschiedlichen Stellungen in Chloroplasten- und Kernphylogenie auf Hybridisierungsereignisse hin.
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The most popular retrotransposon-based molecular marker system in use at the present time is the sequence-specific amplification polymorphism (SSAP) system . This system exploits the insertional polymorphism of long terminal repeat (LTR) retrotransposons around the genome. Because the LTR sequence is used to design primers for this method, its successful application requires sequence information from the terminal region of the mobile elements . In this study, two LTR sequences were isolated from the cashew genome and used successfully to develop SSAP marker systems. These were shown to have higher levels of polymorphism than amplified fragment length polymorphic markers for this species.
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Internal bacterial communities of synanthropic mites Acarus siro, Dermatophagoides farinae, Lepidoglyphus destructor, and Tyrophagus putrescentiae (Acari: Astigmata) were analyzed by culturing and culture-independent approaches from specimens obtained from laboratory colonies. Homogenates of surface-sterilized mites were used for cultivation on non-selective agar and DNA extraction. Isolated bacteria were identified by sequencing of the 16S rRNA gene. PCR amplified 16S rRNA genes were analyzed by terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis (T-RFLP) and cloning sequencing. Fluorescence in situ hybridization using universal bacterial probes was used for direct bacterial localization. T-RFLP analysis of 16S rRNA gene revealed distinct species-specific bacterial communities. The results were further confirmed by cloning and sequencing (284 clones). L. destructor and D. farinae showed more diverse communities then A. siro and T. putrescentiae. In the cultivated part of the community, the mean CFUs from four mite species ranged from 5.2 × 102 to 1.4 × 103 per mite. D. farinae had significantly higher CFUs than the other species. Bacteria were located in the digestive and reproductive tract, parenchymatical tissue, and in bacteriocytes. Among the clones, Bartonella-like bacteria occurring in A. siro and T. putresecentiae represented a distinct group related to Bartonellaceae and to Bartonella-like symbionts of ants. The clones of high similarity to Xenorhabdus cabanillasii were found in L. destructor and D. farinae, and one clone related to Photorhabdus temperata in A. siro. Members of Sphingobacteriales cloned from D. farinae and A. siro clustered with the sequences of “Candidatus Cardinium hertigii” and as a separate novel cluster.
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BACKGROUND: The aim of this study was to evaluate the association of polymorphisms of the peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor gamma (PPARG) gene and peroxisome proliferators-activated receptor gamma co-activator 1 alpha (PPARGC1A) gene with diabetic nephropathy (DN) in Asian Indians. METHODS: Six common polymorphisms, 3 of the PPARG gene [-1279G/A, Pro12Ala, and His478His (C/T)] and 3 of the PPARGC1A gene (Thr394Thr, Gly482Ser, and +A2962G) were studied in 571 normal glucose-tolerant (NGT) subjects, 255 type 2 diabetic (T2D) subjects without nephropathy, and 141 DN subjects. Genotypes were determined by polymerase chain reaction-restriction fragment length polymorphism (PCR-RFLP) and direct sequencing. Logistic regression analysis was performed to assess the covariables associated with DN. RESULTS: Among the 6 polymorphisms examined, only the Gly482Ser of the PPARGC1A gene was significantly associated with DN. The genotype frequency of Ser/Ser genotype of the PPARGC1A gene was 8.8% (50/571) in NGT subjects, 7.8% (20/255) in T2D subjects, and 29.8% (42/141) in DN subjects. The odds ratios (ORs) for DN for the susceptible Gly/Ser and Ser/Ser genotype after adjusting for age, sex, body mass index, and duration of diabetes were 2.14 [95% confidence interval (CI), 1.23-3.72; P = 0.007] and 8.01 (95% CI, 3.89-16.47; P < 0.001), respectively. The unadjusted OR for DN for the XA genotype of the Thr394Thr polymorphism was 1.87 (95% CI, 1.20-2.92; P = 0.006) compared to T2D subjects. However, the significance was lost (P = 0.061) when adjusted for age, sex, BMI, and duration of diabetes. The +A2962G of PPARGC1A and the 3 polymorphisms of PPARG were not associated with DN. CONCLUSION: The Gly482Ser polymorphism of the PPARGC1A gene is associated with DN in Asian Indians.
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AIMS: The aim of the study was to investigate the association of serum adiponectin levels with the Pro12Ala polymorphism of the peroxisome proliferator activated receptor-gamma (PPARG) gene in Asian Indians. METHODS: We selected 400 diabetic subjects, 200 with the Pro12Pro genotype (100 male and 100 female) and 200 with the Pro12Ala genotype (100 male and 100 female) and 400 age- and sex-matched normal glucose tolerance subjects with similar genotype profiles from the Chennai Urban Rural Epidemiology Study. Fasting serum adiponection levels were measured using radioimmunoassay. The Pro12Ala polymorphism was genotyped by PCR-restriction fragment length polymorphism using BstUI. RESULTS: All clinical and biochemical parameters were similar in the subjects with the Pro12Pro and Pro12Ala genotypes. There was no significant difference in serum adiponectin values between subjects with the Pro12Pro and Pro12Ala genotypes (males 5.4 vs. 5.8 microg/ml, P = 0.546; females 6.9 vs. 7.2 microg/ml, P = 0.748). Adiponectin values did not differ among these two genotypes even when categorized based on their diabetes status (normal glucose tolerance Pro12Pro 7.9 vs. Pro12Ala 7.7 microg/ml, P = 0.994; diabetes Pro12Pro 4.7 vs. Pro12Ala 5.4 microg/ml, P = 0.622). CONCLUSION: The Pro12Ala polymorphism of the PPARG gene is not associated with serum adiponectin levels in Asian Indians.
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OBJECTIVE: To determine whether the peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor (PPAR)-gamma Pro12ala polymorphism modulates susceptibility to diabetes in South Asians. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: South Asians (n = 697) and Caucasians (n = 457) living in Dallas/Forth Worth, Texas, and South Asians living in Chennai, India (n = 1,619), were enrolled for this study. PPAR-gamma Pro12Ala was determined using restriction fragment-length polymorphism. Insulin responsiveness to an oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) was measured in nondiabetic subjects. RESULTS: The Caucasian diabetic subjects had significantly lower prevalence of PPAR-gamma 12Ala when compared with the Caucasian nondiabetic subjects (20 vs. 9%, P = 0.006). However, there were no significant differences between diabetic and nondiabetic subjects with reference to the Pro12Ala polymorphism among the South Asians living in Dallas (20 vs. 23%) and in India (19 vs. 19.3%). Although Caucasians carrying PPAR-gamma Pro12Ala had lower plasma insulin levels at 2 h of OGTT than the wild-type (Pro/Pro) carriers (76 +/- 68 and 54 +/- 33 microU/ml, respectively, P = 0.01), no differences in either fasting or 2-h plasma insulin concentrations were found between South Asians carrying the PPAR-gamma Pro12Ala polymorphism and those with the wild-type genotype at either Chennai or Dallas. CONCLUSIONS: Although further replication studies are necessary to test the validity of the described genotype-phenotype relationship, our study supports the hypothesis that the PPAR-gamma Pro12Ala polymorphism is protective against diabetes in Caucasians but not in South Asians.
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Microbial degradation is a major determinant of the fate of pollutants in the environment. para-Nitrophenol (PNP) is an EPA listed priority pollutant with a wide environmental distribution, but little is known about the microorganisms that degrade it in the environment. We studied the diversity of active PNP-degrading bacterial populations in river water using a novel functional marker approach coupled with [13C6]PNP stable isotope probing (SIP). Culturing together with culture-independent terminal restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis of 16S rRNA gene amplicons identified Pseudomonas syringae to be the major driver of PNP degradation in river water microcosms. This was confirmed by SIP-pyrosequencing of amplified 16S rRNA. Similarly, functional gene analysis showed that degradation followed the Gram-negative bacterial pathway and involved pnpA from Pseudomonas spp. However, analysis of maleylacetate reductase (encoded by mar), an enzyme common to late stages of both Gram-negative and Gram-positive bacterial PNP degradation pathways, identified a diverse assemblage of bacteria associated with PNP degradation, suggesting that mar has limited use as a specific marker of PNP biodegradation. Both the pnpA and mar genes were detected in a PNP-degrading isolate, P. syringae AKHD2, which was isolated from river water. Our results suggest that PNP-degrading cultures of Pseudomonas spp. are representative of environmental PNP-degrading populations.
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Inflammatory cytokines such as interieukin-1 beta (IL-1 beta) are involved in the pathogenesis of periodontal diseases. A high individual variation in the levels of IL-10 mRNA has been verified, which is possibly determined by genetic polymorphisms and/or by the presence of periodontopathogens such as Porphyromonas gingivalis, Tannerella forsythia, Treponema denticola, and Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans. In this study, we investigated the role of an IL-10 promoter single-nucleotide polymorphism at position 3954 [IL-1 beta(3954) SNP] and the presence of the periodontopathogens in the determination of the IL-1 beta levels in the periodontal tissues of nonsmoking chronic periodontitis (CP) patients (n = 117) and control (C) subjects in = 175) and the possible correlations with the clinical parameters of the disease. IL-1 beta(3954) SNP was investigated by restriction fragment length polymorphism, while the IL-1 beta levels and the presence of the periodontopathogens were determined by real-time PCR. Similar frequencies of IL-1 beta(3954) SNP were found in the C and CP groups, in spite of a trend toward a higher incidence of T alleles in the CP group. The IL-1 beta (3954) SNP CT and TT genotypes, as well as P. gingivalis, T. forsythia, and T. denticola, were associated with higher IL-1 beta levels and with higher values of the clinical parameters of disease severity. Concomitant analyses demonstrate that IL-1 beta(3954) and the red complex periodontopathogens were found to independently and additively modulate the levels of IL-1 beta in periodontal tissues. Similarly, the concurrent presence of both factors was associated with increased scores of disease severity. IL-1 beta(3954) genotypes and red complex periodontopathogens, individually and additively, modulate the levels of IL-1 beta in the diseased tissues of nonsmoking CP patients and, consequently, are potentially involved in the determination of the disease outcome.
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Background and Objective: Inflammatory cytokines such as tumor necrosis factor-alpha are involved in the pathogenesis of periodontal diseases. A high between-subject variation in the level of tumor necrosis factor-alpha mRNA has been verified, which may be a result of genetic polymorphisms and/or the presence of periodontopathogens such as Porphyromonas gingivalis, Tannerella forsythia, Treponema denticola (called the red complex) and Aggregatibacter actinomycetemcomitans. In this study, we investigated the effect of the tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNFA) -308G/A gene polymorphism and of periodontopathogens on the tumor necrosis factor-alpha levels in the periodontal tissues of nonsmoking patients with chronic periodontitis (n = 127) and in control subjects (n = 177). Material and Methods: The TNFA-308G/A single nucleotide polymorphism was investigated using polymerase chain reaction-restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis, whereas the tumor necrosis factor-alpha levels and the periodontopathogen load were determined using real-time polymerase chain reaction. Results: No statistically significant differences were found in the frequency of the TNFA-308 single nucleotide polymorphism in control and chronic periodontitis groups, in spite of the higher frequency of the A allele in the chronic periodontitis group. The concomitant analyses of genotypes and periodontopathogens demonstrated that TNFA-308 GA/AA genotypes and the red-complex periodontopathogens were independently associated with increased levels of tumor necrosis factor-alpha in periodontal tissues, and no additive effect was seen when both factors were present. P. gingivalis, T. forsythia and T. denticola counts were positively correlated with the level of tumor necrosis factor-alpha. TNFA-308 genotypes were not associated with the periodontopathogen detection odds or with the bacterial load. Conclusion: Our results demonstrate that the TNFA-308 A allele and red-complex periodontopathogens are independently associated with increased levels of tumor necrosis factor-alpha in diseased tissues of nonsmoking chronic periodontitis patients and consequently are potentially involved in determining the disease outcome.
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Toxoplasma gondii infection is widely prevalent in humans in Brazil. Among the food animals, pigs are considered the most important meat source of T. gondii for infection in humans. In the present study, we report the first isolation of viable T. gondii from finishing pigs in Brazil. Antibodies to T. gondii were found in 49 (17%) of 286 pigs prior slaughter using the modified agglutination test (MAT) at a serum dilution of 1:25. Attempts were made to isolate T. gondii from 28 seropositive pigs. Samples of heart, brain, and tongue from each pig were pooled, digested in acid pepsin, and bioassayed in five mice per pig. Viable T. gondii was isolated from seven pigs; all isolates were lethal for mice. Restriction fragment length polymorphism on products of SAG2 locus amplified by PCR revealed that two isolates were Type I and five were Type III. The results indicate that phenotypically and genetically T. gondii isolates from pigs from Brazil are distinct from isolates of T gondii from pigs in the USA. (c) 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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Studies have suggested that hepatitis C virus (HCV) may infect not only hepatocytes but may also be carried by platelets. Platelets express more than 20 polymorphic antigenic determinants on their surface, which are called human platelet antigens (HPA), To determine the allele frequency of the HPA-1 to -5 in patients infected with HCV, blood samples were collected from 257 blood donors for the control group and from 191 patients infected with HCV. DNA was isolated and amplified for genes HPA-1 to -4 using PCR Sequence Specific Primers (PCR-SSP) and HPA-5 using PCR-Restriction Fragment Length Polymorphism (PCR-RFLP). The allelic and genotypic frequency of HPA-5a in patients infected with HCV was found to be significantly lower(P < 0.05) than in the controls, and HPA-5b from patients infected with HCV was significantly higher (P < 0.05) than in controls. The increase in HPA5b allelic frequency in HCV infection may indicate a possible association between HCV infection and HPAs. J. Med. Virol. 81:757-759, 2009. (C) 2009 Wiley-Liss, Inc.