Relation between tumour necrosis factor polymorphism TNFα-308 and risk of asthma

2002 
Tumour necrosis factor (TNF) alpha affects immune response and airway inflammation, which are characteristics of asthma. Genetic factors may impact TNFa levels, and several polymorphisms in the TNF gene cluster on chromosome 6p21 have been associated with TNFa production and potential increased risk of asthma. The present paper evaluates the relation between two single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the TNF gene cluster and asthma risk. The SNPs investigated here are guanine (G) to adenosine (A) substitutions in the TNFa and lymphotoxin alpha (LTa) genes. The TNFa SNP is at position -308 in the promoter region (TNFa-308), while the LTa SNP is in the first intron NcoI recognition sequence (LTa-NcoI). (For both SNPs the G allele is denoted as 1, and the A allele 2.) We determined TNFa-308 and LTa-NcoI genotypes in 511 individuals: 236 asthma cases and 275 non-asthmatic controls. Data were analysed by logistic regression of asthma status on the genotypes and potential confounders. TNFa-308*2 was positively associated with asthma, and this relation was strengthened when restricting cases to individuals reporting acute asthma: the adjusted odds ratio (OR) comparing carriers of one or two TNFa-308*2 alleles versus none was 1.86 (95% confidence interval (CI)=1.03 ‐ 3.34, P=0.04). Further restricting the subjects to those with a family history of asthma, and those of European-American ancestry strengthened the association even more: adjusted OR=3.16 (95% CI=1.04 ‐ 9.66; P=0.04). LTa-NcoI*1 was weakly associated with asthma, and analysis of both genes suggests that only the TNFa-308*2 allele increases risk of asthma. European Journal of Human Genetics (2002) 10, 82 ‐ 85. DOI: 10.1038/sj/ejhg/5200746
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    26
    References
    122
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []