Title of article :
Determination of ancestral allele for possible human cancer-associated polymorphisms
Author/Authors :
Maruta، نويسنده , , Yuichi and Okayama، نويسنده , , Naoko and Hiura، نويسنده , , Mikako and Suehiro، نويسنده , , Yutaka and Hirai، نويسنده , , Hirohisa and Hinoda، نويسنده , , Yuji، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages :
6
From page :
24
To page :
29
Abstract :
To determine ancestral allele in possible cancer-associated polymorphisms, DNA samples from 10 chimpanzees (Pan troglodytes) were sequenced for alleles corresponding to 17 polymorphisms: 8 short tandem repeats [IL1RN (alias IL-1RA) variable number tandem repeat (VNTR); TYMS (previously TS) VNTR; AR CAG repeat; dinucleotide repeats of UGT1A1, IGF1, IFNG (alias IFN-γ), ESR1 (alias ER-α), and EGFR] and 9 single nucleotide polymorphisms (MMP1-1607 1G/2G, MMP3-1171 5A/6A, OGG1 Ser326Cys, ALDH2 Gly487Lys, TP53 Arg72Pro, ABCG2 Gln141Lys, MGMT Leu84Phe, SOD2 Ala-9Val, and MTHFR Ala222Val). No chimpanzee polymorphism corresponded to human IL1RN VNTR; the ancestral allele was a repeat lost in humans. Dinucleotide repeat polymorphisms of IGF1, IFNG, ESR1, and EGFR were shared by chimpanzees, but the length of repeats tended to be longer in humans than in chimpanzees. This tendency was particularly evident for IGF1. All of the SNPs tested are human-specific nucleotide changes. The ancestral allele 7A was shown to be lost in MMP3-1171 5A/6A. Thus, all of the possible cancer-associated polymorphisms tested have human-specific alleles, and the ancestral allele is lost in three polymorphisms (IL1RN VNTR, UGT1A1 CA repeat, and MMP3-1171 5A/6A), suggesting a possible involvement of human-specific alleles in cancer susceptibility.
Journal title :
Cancer Genetics and Cytogenetics
Serial Year :
2008
Journal title :
Cancer Genetics and Cytogenetics
Record number :
1828828
Link To Document :
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