| Literature DB >> 19169360 |
Jennifer L Taylor-Cousar1, Maimoona A Zariwala, Lauranell H Burch, Rhonda G Pace, Mitchell L Drumm, Hollin Calloway, Haiying Fan, Brent W Weston, Fred A Wright, Michael R Knowles.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The pulmonary phenotype in cystic fibrosis (CF) is variable; thus, environmental and genetic factors likely contribute to clinical heterogeneity. We hypothesized that genetically determined ABO histo-blood group antigen (ABH) differences in glycosylation may lead to differences in microbial binding by airway mucus, and thus predispose to early lung infection and more severe lung disease in a subset of patients with CF. METHODS AND PRINCIPALEntities:
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Year: 2009 PMID: 19169360 PMCID: PMC2627933 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0004270
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Prevalence of ABO blood types in severe and mild patient groups.
| Blood type | Severe Group | Mild Group |
|
| 127 (50.8%) | 243 (46.2%) |
|
| 21 (8.3%) | 62 (11.8%) |
|
| 94 (37.3%) | 202 (38.4%) |
|
| 9 (3.6%) | 19 (3.6%) |
| 252 | 526 |
ABO allele frequencies and resultant ABO phenotypes were consistent with known prevalence in the Caucasian population. [26] There is no significant difference in blood type distribution amongst mild and severe patients, or in any subgroup analysis (see Text S1) by Fisher exact test. (n = 778, p = 0.446)
Prevalence of FUT2 and FUT3 alleles and genotypes in severe and mild patient groups.
| Gene | Variant | Reference SNP | Impairment of lung function | Genotype | Patients with genotype | Genotype | Patients with genotype | Genotype | Patients with genotype | Number of Patients | P-Value§ |
| FUT2 (Secretor gene) | G428A | rs601338 | Mild | AA | 137(24.3%) | AG | 273 (54.0%) | GG | 134 (21.6%) | 544 | 0.569 |
| Severe | AA | 57 (21.8%) | AG | 137 (52.3%) | GG | 68 (26.0%) | 262 | ||||
| FUT3 (Lewis gene) | T59G | rs28362459 | Mild | TT | 389 (84.0%) | TG | 71 (15.6%) | GG | 3 (1.2%) | 463 | 0.554 |
| Severe | TT | 208 (82.2%) | TG | 43 (16.9%) | GG | 3 (1.2%) | 254 | ||||
| T202C | rs812936 | Mild | TT | 318 (66.1%) | TC | 127 (30.3%) | CC | 18 (3.47%) | 463 | 0.491 | |
| Severe | TT | 168 (66.1%) | TC | 79 (31.1%) | CC | 7 (2.8%) | 254 | ||||
| C314T | rs778986 | Mild | CC | 321 (66.5%) | CT | 126 (30.4%) | TT | 16 (3.1%) | 463 | 0.615 | |
| Severe | CC | 172 (67.7%) | CT | 76 (29.9%) | TT | 6 (2.4%) | 254 | ||||
| T1067A | rs3894326 | Mild | TT | 420 (90.4%) | TA | 43 (9.64%) | AA | 0 | 463 | 0.792 | |
| Severe | TT | 229 (90.2%) | TA | 25 (9.8%) | AA | 0 | 254 |
FUT2 and FUT3 allele frequencies and genotypes, and resultant phenotypes were consistent with that known for the Caucasian population. [27] There is no association between lung disease severity in patients homozygous for the ΔF508 mutation and individual FUT2 or FUT 3 SNPs, nor with secretor or Lewis status. § P-values generated by Fisher exact test.
Figure 1Association between age of onset of persistent P. aeruginosa infection and ABH type.
Kaplan-Meir curves were generated (includes exit censoring) to test associations between ABH and age of onset of P. aeruginosa infection in the respiratory tract for patients with mild and severe disease. (For simplicity, figures show the proportion of infected patients in the combined group of young mild and severe patients for whom culture and ABH genotype data was available.) A) ABO blood group, B) Secretor phenotype and C) Lewis phenotype. No significant differences were seen.