Prostaglandin H Synthase 2 Variant (Val511Ala) in African Americans May Reduce the Risk for Colorectal Neoplasia

2002 
Prostaglandin H synthase 2 (also known as cyclooxygenase-2) is thought to play a role in the prevention of colon cancer by aspirin, an inhibitor of the enzyme. We used DNA heteroduplex analysis to screen the prostaglandin H synthase 2 gene, to search for naturally occurring enzyme variants that may simulate the effects of aspirin. We found among African-Americans a single-nucleotide polymorphism that changes valine to alanine at residue 511 (V511A; GTT>GCT; g.5939T>C; allele frequency 0.045). The polymorphism was also seen among Asian-Indians (allele frequency, 0.03) but not among Chinese, Filipinos, Hispanics, Japanese, Koreans, Samoans, and Caucasians. The amino acid change is predicted to open a 53 cubic angstrom cavity near the active site of the enzyme, but no change in V max, K m, or thermal stability was observed for the variant enzyme in COS-1 cell transfection assays. Case-control analysis of African-Americans from two different study populations showed a 0.56 odds ratio for colorectal adenomas among polymorphism carriers (95% confidence interval, 0.25–1.27; 161 cases and 219 controls). A similar analysis of African-Americans nested in the Multiethnic Cohort Study showed a 0.67 odds ratio for colorectal cancer (95% confidence interval, 0.28–1.56; 138 cases and 258 controls). Consistency of the results across all three of the studies is potentially compatible with a protective effect of the polymorphism, mimicking aspirin.
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