Association between a TGFbeta1 promoter polymorphism and rhinosinusitis in aspirin-intolerant asthmatic patients
Association between a TGFbeta1 promoter polymorphism and rhinosinusitis in aspirin-intolerant asthmatic patients
BACKGROUND: Rhinosinusitis is highly associated with aspirin-intolerant asthma (AIA). The risk of aspirin intolerance is higher in people with rhinosinusitis than in those without it. Recently, the role of transforming growth factor beta1 (TGFbeta1) in the pathogenesis of chronic rhinosinusitis has come under investigation. The goal of this study was to evaluate the association of TGFbeta1 gene polymorphism with an AIA phenotype in the Korean population.
METHODS: A promoter polymorphism of the TGFbeta1 gene, TGFbeta1-509C>T, and a coding polymorphism (L10P), were genotyped in 203 patients with AIA, 324 patients with aspirin-tolerant asthma (ATA), and 456 normal controls (NC). Serum TGFbeta1 levels were determined by ELISA.
RESULTS: The TGFbeta1-509C>T polymorphism was not significantly associated with the AIA phenotype; however, a significant association with the prevalence of rhinosinusitis in AIA (P=0.012), but not in ATA (P>0.05), was observed. When stratified by the presence of rhinosinusitis, the frequency of T allele carriers (CT or TT genotype) of TGFbeta1-509C>T was significantly higher in AIA (87.1%) compared to ATA (52.9%, P<0.001, OR=6.0, 95% CI=3.3-11.1). In addition, AIA patients carrying the TGFbeta1-509T allele showed a lower serum TGFbeta1 level compared to AIA patients carrying the TGFbeta1-509 CC genotype, especially when stratified by the presence of rhinosinusitis (P=0.002).
CONCLUSION: Our results show that the TGFbeta1 polymorphisms are not associated with the AIA phenotype in the Korean population, but may contribute to the development of the AIA phenotype with rhinosinusitis.
aspirin-intolerant asthma, genetic polymorphism, rhinosinusitis, transforming growth factor ?1
490-495
Kim, Seung-Hyun
4ed221fd-ae86-41dc-a574-4f4d0b291555
Park, Hae-Sim
00bcb025-0437-4185-a733-d2c935a3945b
Holloway, John W.
4bbd77e6-c095-445d-a36b-a50a72f6fe1a
Shin, Hyoung-Doo
7459d733-650f-4e5a-9904-2778b9bd1ff4
Park, Choon-Sik
8a8148da-2831-41d9-b943-04c16b42062f
March 2007
Kim, Seung-Hyun
4ed221fd-ae86-41dc-a574-4f4d0b291555
Park, Hae-Sim
00bcb025-0437-4185-a733-d2c935a3945b
Holloway, John W.
4bbd77e6-c095-445d-a36b-a50a72f6fe1a
Shin, Hyoung-Doo
7459d733-650f-4e5a-9904-2778b9bd1ff4
Park, Choon-Sik
8a8148da-2831-41d9-b943-04c16b42062f
Kim, Seung-Hyun, Park, Hae-Sim, Holloway, John W., Shin, Hyoung-Doo and Park, Choon-Sik
(2007)
Association between a TGFbeta1 promoter polymorphism and rhinosinusitis in aspirin-intolerant asthmatic patients.
Respiratory Medicine, 101 (3), .
(doi:10.1016/j.rmed.2006.07.002).
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Rhinosinusitis is highly associated with aspirin-intolerant asthma (AIA). The risk of aspirin intolerance is higher in people with rhinosinusitis than in those without it. Recently, the role of transforming growth factor beta1 (TGFbeta1) in the pathogenesis of chronic rhinosinusitis has come under investigation. The goal of this study was to evaluate the association of TGFbeta1 gene polymorphism with an AIA phenotype in the Korean population.
METHODS: A promoter polymorphism of the TGFbeta1 gene, TGFbeta1-509C>T, and a coding polymorphism (L10P), were genotyped in 203 patients with AIA, 324 patients with aspirin-tolerant asthma (ATA), and 456 normal controls (NC). Serum TGFbeta1 levels were determined by ELISA.
RESULTS: The TGFbeta1-509C>T polymorphism was not significantly associated with the AIA phenotype; however, a significant association with the prevalence of rhinosinusitis in AIA (P=0.012), but not in ATA (P>0.05), was observed. When stratified by the presence of rhinosinusitis, the frequency of T allele carriers (CT or TT genotype) of TGFbeta1-509C>T was significantly higher in AIA (87.1%) compared to ATA (52.9%, P<0.001, OR=6.0, 95% CI=3.3-11.1). In addition, AIA patients carrying the TGFbeta1-509T allele showed a lower serum TGFbeta1 level compared to AIA patients carrying the TGFbeta1-509 CC genotype, especially when stratified by the presence of rhinosinusitis (P=0.002).
CONCLUSION: Our results show that the TGFbeta1 polymorphisms are not associated with the AIA phenotype in the Korean population, but may contribute to the development of the AIA phenotype with rhinosinusitis.
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Published date: March 2007
Keywords:
aspirin-intolerant asthma, genetic polymorphism, rhinosinusitis, transforming growth factor ?1
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Local EPrints ID: 59352
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/59352
PURE UUID: 3dd734f1-3be4-430e-8ad2-f94b963dffa1
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Date deposited: 02 Sep 2008
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 02:57
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Author:
Seung-Hyun Kim
Author:
Hae-Sim Park
Author:
Hyoung-Doo Shin
Author:
Choon-Sik Park
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