Comprehensive investigation of cytokine- and immune-related gene variants in HBV-associated hepatocellular carcinoma patients
Author(s) -
Fengxue Yu,
Xiaolin Zhang,
Suzhai Tian,
Lianxia Geng,
Weili Xu,
Ning Ma,
Mingbang Wang,
Yuan Jia,
Xuechen Liu,
Junji Ma,
Quan Yuan,
Chaojun Zhang,
Lina Guo,
Wenting An,
Dianwu Liu
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
bioscience reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.938
H-Index - 77
eISSN - 1573-4935
pISSN - 0144-8463
DOI - 10.1042/bsr20171263
Subject(s) - hepatocellular carcinoma , hepatitis b virus , gene , genotype , exact test , exon , hepatitis b , virology , immune system , immunology , medicine , biology , virus , genetics
Host genotype may be closely related to the different outcomes of Hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection. To identify the association of variants and HBV infection, we comprehensively investigated the cytokine- and immune-related gene mutations in patients with HBV associated hepatocellular carcinoma (HBV-HCC). Fifty-three HBV-HCC patients, 53 self-healing cases (SH) with HBV infection history and 53 healthy controls (HCs) were recruited, the whole exon region of 404 genes were sequenced at >900× depth. Comprehensive variants and gene levels were compared between HCC and HC, and HCC and SH. Thirty-nine variants (adjusted P <0.0001, Fisher's exact test) and 11 genes (adjusted P <0.0001, optimal unified approach for rare variant association test ( SKAT-O ) gene level test) were strongly associated with HBV-HCC. Thirty-four variants were from eight human leukocyte antigen (HLA) genes that were previously reported to be associated with HBV-HCC. The novelties of our study are: five variants (rs579876, rs579877, rs368692979, NM_145007:c.*131_*130delTG, NM_139165:exon5:c.623-2->TT) from three genes ( REAT1E , NOD-like receptor (NLR) protein 11 ( NLRP11 ), hydroxy-carboxylic acid receptor 2 ( HCAR2 )) were found strongly associated with HBV-HCC. We found 39 different variants in 11 genes that were significantly related to HBV-HCC. Five of them were new findings. Our data implied that chronic hepatitis B patients who carry these variants are at a high risk of developing HCC.
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