| Literature DB >> 26421011 |
Giacomo Tirabassi1, Angelo Cignarelli2, Sebastio Perrini2, Nicola Delli Muti1, Giorgio Furlani1, Mariagrazia Gallo3, Francesco Pallotti3, Donatella Paoli3, Francesco Giorgino2, Francesco Lombardo3, Loredana Gandini3, Andrea Lenzi3, Giancarlo Balercia1.
Abstract
In the last decade, ample evidence has demonstrated the growing importance of androgen receptor (AR) CAG repeat polymorphism in andrology. This genetic parameter is able to condition the peripheral effects of testosterone and therefore to influence male sexual function and fertility, cardiovascular risk, body composition, bone metabolism, the risk of prostate and testicular cancer, the psychiatric status, and the onset of neurodegenerative disorders. In this review, we extensively discuss the literature data and identify a role for AR CAG repeat polymorphism in conditioning the systemic testosterone effects. In particular, our main purpose was to provide an updated text able to shed light on the many and often contradictory findings reporting an influence of CAG repeat polymorphism on the targets of testosterone action.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26421011 PMCID: PMC4572434 DOI: 10.1155/2015/298107
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Endocrinol ISSN: 1687-8337 Impact factor: 3.257
Figure 1Localization of CAG repeat in androgen receptor and influence on DNA transcriptional activity. Precise mechanisms by which CAG repeat influences DNA trascription are not clear and hypotheses have been raised. Opposite association has been found between CAG repeat (polyglutamine tract) length and DNA trascriptional activity. The polyglutamine tract may indirectly affect androgen receptor function by causing structural perturbations within the transactivation domain. Alternatively, the glutamine residues may contact another protein and inhibit interactions of the activation domain with its target protein. Finally, glutamine residues could interact with a specific repressing protein, thus determining inhibition [107].
Figure 2Tissues and organs influenced by the androgen receptor CAG repeat polymorphism.
Summary of meta-analysis results regarding the association between androgen receptor CAG repeat and prostate cancer.
| Meta-analysis | Number of studies included | Cases/controls | Opposite relation between CAG length and prostate cancer risk | Remarks |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Zeegers et al. [ | 19 | 4274/5275 | Yes | Modest association between shorter repeats and prostate cancer risk |
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| Gu et al. [ | 27 | 2972/3792, 3835/4908, and 3372/2631 for comparisons of ≥20, 22, and 23 repeats of CAG sequence with others | Yes | AR CAG repeat polymorphism with ≥20 repeats might confer a protective effect among the prostate cancer patients older than 45 years but not all the prostate cancer patients |
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Sun and Lee [ | 47 | 13346/15172 | Yes | Shorter CAG repeat sequence had an increased risk of prostate cancer (OR 1.21, 95% CI 1.10–1.34) regardless of the exact length of the CAG repeat, compared with carriers of a longer repeat sequence |
OR: odds ratio; AR: androgen receptor.