| Literature DB >> 29034060 |
Sonia Sanna1, Giannina Satta2, Marina Padoan3, Sara Piro4, Angela Gambelunghe5, Lucia Miligi4, Giovanni Maria Ferri6, Corrado Magnani3, Giacomo Muzi5, Luigi Rigacci7, Maria Giuseppina Cabras8, Emanuele Angelucci8, Gian Carlo Latte9, Attilio Gabbas2, Maria Grazia Ennas1, Pierluigi Cocco2.
Abstract
The aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AhR) is a transcription factor implicated in several pathways known to be relevant in lymphomagenesis. Aim of our study was to explore the link between AhR activation and risk of lymphoma subtypes. We used a Dual-Luciferase Assay® and a luminometer to detect the activation of the luciferase gene, in HepG2 cells transfected with a specific reporter systems, by a 50 ml serum aliquot of cases of diffuse large B cell lymphoma (N = 108), follicular lymphoma (N = 85), chronic lymphocytic leukemia (N = 72), multiple myeloma (N = 80), and Hodgkin lymphoma (N = 94) and 357 controls who participated in the multicentre Italian study on gene-environment interactions in lymphoma etiology (ItGxE). Risk of each lymphoma subtype associated with AhR activation was calculated with polytomous logistic regression adjusting by age, gender, and study centre. The overall prevalence of AhR activation ranged 13.9-23.6% by subtype, and it varied by study area (8-39%). Risk associated with AhR activation was moderately elevated for follicular lymphoma (OR = 1.56, 95% CI 0.86, 2.80) and chronic lymphocytic leukemia (OR = 1.56, 95% CI 0.83, 2.96). Despite our inconclusive findings about the association with risk of lymphoma subtypes, we showed that the Dual-Luciferase Assay can be reliably and easily applied in population-based studies to detect AhR activation.Entities:
Keywords: Aryl hydrocarbon receptor; case-control study; dual luciferase assay; lymphoma; molecular epidemiology
Year: 2017 PMID: 29034060 PMCID: PMC5636915
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Epidemiol Genet ISSN: 1948-1756