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Investigation of the Association between Genetic Polymorphism of Microsomal Epoxide Hydrolase and Primary Brain Tumor Incidence
Author(s) -
Ali Aydın,
Hatice Pınarbaşı,
Mustafa Gürelik
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
molecular biology international
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2090-2190
pISSN - 2090-2182
DOI - 10.1155/2013/189237
Subject(s) - exon , microsomal epoxide hydrolase , turkish population , brain tumor , allele , gene , genetic predisposition , genetics , genetic association , polymorphism (computer science) , primary tumor , population , biology , medicine , microbiology and biotechnology , epoxide hydrolase , genotype , cancer , single nucleotide polymorphism , pathology , microsome , in vitro , environmental health , metastasis
mEH is a critical biotransformation enzyme that catalyzes the conversion of xenobiotic epoxide substrates into more polar diol metabolites: it is also capable of inactivating a large number of structurally different molecules. Two polymorphisms affecting enzyme activity have been described in the exon 3 and 4 of the mEH gene. The hypothesis of this study is that inherent genetic susceptibility to a primary brain tumor is associated with mEH gene polymorphisms. The polymorphisms of the mEH gene were determined with PCR-RFLP techniques and 255 Turkish individuals. Our results indicate that the frequency of the mEH exon 4 polymorphism (in controls) is significantly higher than that of primary brain tumor patients (OR = 1.8, 95% CI = 1.0–3.4). This report, however, failed to demonstrate a significant association between mEH exon 3 polymorphism and primary brain tumor susceptibility in this population. Analysis of patients by both histological types of primary brain tumor and gene variants showed no association, although analysis of family history of cancer between cases and controls showed a statistically significant association ( χ 2 = 7.0, P = 0.01). Our results marginally support the hypothesis that genetic susceptibility to brain tumors may be associated with mEPHX gene polymorphisms.

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