Phosphotyrosine-Protein-Phosphatases and Human Reproduction: An Association between Low Molecular Weight Acid Phosphatase (ACPl) and Spontaneous Abortion
Author(s) -
F. GloriaBottini,
M. Nicotra,
N. Lucarini,
Paola Borgiani,
Mauro La Torre,
A. Amante,
A. Gimelfarb,
E Bottini
Publication year - 1996
Publication title -
disease markers
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.912
H-Index - 66
eISSN - 1875-8630
pISSN - 0278-0240
DOI - 10.1155/1996/814192
Subject(s) - abortion , allele , gene isoform , genotype , isozyme , acid phosphatase , phosphatase , pregnancy , polymorphism (computer science) , biology , enzyme , endocrinology , medicine , genetics , biochemistry , gene
ACP1 (low molecular weight acid phosphatase) genetic polymorphism has been studied in 173 women with a history of two or more consecutive spontaneous abortions and in 1508 control subjects, including 482 normal pregnant women. The proportion of carriers of ACP1*C allele (*A/ *C, *B/*C) in women with a history of repeated spontaneous abortion is lower than in normal pregnant women and other control groups. Women with repeated spontaneous abortion show a specific decrease of ACP1 S isoform concentration as compared to normal pregnant women. The other component of ACP1 activity, the F isoform, does not show a significant difference between the two groups. The data suggest that women with ACP1 genotypes showing a high concentration of S isoform are relatively 'protected' against spontaneous abortion. Preliminary analysis of a sample of 352 normal puerperae along with their newborn babies supports this hypothesis.
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