Oksana Yurievna Bordaeva , Ekaterina Grigorievna Derevyanchuk , Dema Alset , Maria Aleksandrovna Amelina , Tatiana Pavlovna Shkurat
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Preeclampsia is a pregnancy-associated hypertensive pathology that affects maternal and fetal quality of life. It was linked to several environmental and genetic factors including genetic polymorphisms. This study aimed to study the association, SNP-SNP interactions and haplotypes associations of thrombophilia, folate cycle and hypertension maternal genetic variations with preeclampsia risk in Russian women from Rostov region. 53 pregnant women diagnosed with preeclampsia were compared with 3108 women with relatively healthy pregnancy. DNA was extracted from blood samples and real time allele specific PCR was used for genotyping. MDR analysis was used for SNP-SNP interactions study. According to our data, F5(G1691A) and ITGB3(T1565C) mutant homozygotes were associated with higher risk of preeclampsia. MTRR (A66G) mutant allele (G) was shown as significant preeclampsia risk factor. ADD1 (G1378T) showed significantly higher frequency of mutant allele (T) and mutant homozygote genotype (TT) in preeclampsia patients comparing to control group. MDR showed that this polymorphism has the higher entropy among targeted variations which was confirmed by binary haplotypes association study. We have also examined linkage disequilibrium showing two haploblocks in between the studied genetic variations included MTHFR (C677T) and MTHFR (A1298C) block and AGT (T704C) with AGT (C521T) block. Results suggest several genetic variations and haplotypes as perspective maternal marker for preeclampsia which will contribute to improve prognosis tools and accordingly treatment and prevention possibilities.
Gene ReportsBiochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology-Genetics
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
7.70%
发文量
246
审稿时长
49 days
期刊介绍:
Gene Reports publishes papers that focus on the regulation, expression, function and evolution of genes in all biological contexts, including all prokaryotic and eukaryotic organisms, as well as viruses. Gene Reports strives to be a very diverse journal and topics in all fields will be considered for publication. Although not limited to the following, some general topics include: DNA Organization, Replication & Evolution -Focus on genomic DNA (chromosomal organization, comparative genomics, DNA replication, DNA repair, mobile DNA, mitochondrial DNA, chloroplast DNA). Expression & Function - Focus on functional RNAs (microRNAs, tRNAs, rRNAs, mRNA splicing, alternative polyadenylation) Regulation - Focus on processes that mediate gene-read out (epigenetics, chromatin, histone code, transcription, translation, protein degradation). Cell Signaling - Focus on mechanisms that control information flow into the nucleus to control gene expression (kinase and phosphatase pathways controlled by extra-cellular ligands, Wnt, Notch, TGFbeta/BMPs, FGFs, IGFs etc.) Profiling of gene expression and genetic variation - Focus on high throughput approaches (e.g., DeepSeq, ChIP-Seq, Affymetrix microarrays, proteomics) that define gene regulatory circuitry, molecular pathways and protein/protein networks. Genetics - Focus on development in model organisms (e.g., mouse, frog, fruit fly, worm), human genetic variation, population genetics, as well as agricultural and veterinary genetics. Molecular Pathology & Regenerative Medicine - Focus on the deregulation of molecular processes in human diseases and mechanisms supporting regeneration of tissues through pluripotent or multipotent stem cells.