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  • TGF-beta1 genotypes in cirrhosis: relationship with the occurrence of liver cancer.

TGF-beta1 genotypes in cirrhosis: relationship with the occurrence of liver cancer.

Cytokine (2008-09-24)
Edmondo Falleti, Carlo Fabris, Pierluigi Toniutto, Elisabetta Fontanini, Annarosa Cussigh, Davide Bitetto, Ezio Fornasiere, Claudio Avellini, Rosalba Minisini, Mario Pirisi
ABSTRACT

This study aimed to verify whether specific single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) of the transforming growth factor-beta1 (TGF-beta1) may predispose to end-stage liver disease and/or hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC). One hundred eighty-eight consecutive patients transplanted for liver cirrhosis (HBV N=21, HCV N=68, alcoholic N=55 and others N=23) and a control group of 140 healthy blood donors were investigated. Four SNPs were studied by restriction fragment length assays: -800G>A, -509C>T, Leu10Pro and Arg25Pro. Patients were found to possess the -509T/ * (TT 53/188, CT 85/188, CC 50/188 vs TT 22/140, CT 61/140, CC 57/140; p<0.002) and Arg25Pro C/ * genotypes (CC 1/188, CG 31/188, GG 156/188 vs CC 0/140, CG 13/140, GG 127/140; p<0.05) more frequently than controls. Patients with cirrhosis complicated by HCC possessed more frequently the Leu10Pro T/ * genotype than patients without HCC (TT 20/54, CT 26/54, CC 8/54 vs TT 31/134, CT 69/134, CC 34/134; p<0.05). The analysis of molecular variance detected significant genotypic differentiations between controls and cirrhotics but not between cirrhotics with or without HCC. In conclusion, TGF-beta1 SNPs probably facilitate the development of liver cirrhosis, while they seem to have a limited role in predicting the occurrence of HCC.