| Literature DB >> 16764598 |
M Bagheri1, I Abdi-Rad, D Omrani, H R Khalkhali.
Abstract
Cytokine gene polymorphisms may affect their transcription, influence their level of production and may be implicated in inducing susceptibility or resistance to diseases. In 40 Iranian healthy subjects, cytokine single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) were used to determine allelic and genotypic frequencies for the following cytokine genes: IL-1a (T/C -889), IL-1beta (C/T -511, T/C 3962), IL-12 (C/A -1188), IFN-gamma (A/T UTR 5644), TGF-beta (C/T codon 10, G/C codon 25), TNF-a (G/A -308, G/A -238), IL-2 (T/G -330, G/T 166), IL-4 (T/G -1089, T/C -590, T/C -33), IL-6 (G/C -174, G/A nt565), IL-10 (G/A -1082, C/T -819, C/A -592), IL-1R (C/T pst11970), IL-1RA (T/C mspa111100) and IL-4RA (G/A 1902). All typing were performed with polymerase chain reaction with sequence specific primers assay. Significant heterogeneity of cytokine SNPs among the Iranian and the other East-South Asian populations was observed. Heterogeneity of cytokine SNPs may explain the role of natural selection in susceptibilities of populations to different disorders.Entities:
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Year: 2006 PMID: 16764598 DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-3148.2006.00666.x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transfus Med ISSN: 0958-7578 Impact factor: 2.019