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  • Title: A common variant in the precursor miR-146a sequence does not predispose to cholangiocarcinoma in a large European cohort.
    Author: Mihalache F, Hoblinger A, Acalovschi M, Sauerbruch T, Lammert F, Zimmer V.
    Journal: Hepatobiliary Pancreat Dis Int; 2012 Aug 15; 11(4):412-7. PubMed ID: 22893469.
    Abstract:
    BACKGROUND: Micro-RNAs (miRNAs) are small, non-coding RNA species considered to fine-tune basic cellular functions by modulating target gene translation and/or mRNA stability. A common G/C polymorphism (rs2910164) in the precursor (pre-) miR-146a gene engaged in NF-κB signaling and apoptosis pathways has been reported to modulate the genetic risk of hepatocellular carcinoma by increased G-allelic production of mature miR-146a. We investigated rs2910164 in a large European-based cholangiocarcinoma (CCA) cohort. METHODS: We recruited 182 CCA patients and 350 controls in three academic medical centers. Genotyping for rs2910164 was performed by PCR-based assays with 5'-nuclease and fluorescence detection. Genotype frequencies were tested for consistency with the Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium using an exact test; allelic and genotypic differences between the patients and controls were assessed by the Chi-square test and Armitage's trend test. Exploratory subgroup analyses included gender, tumor localization (extra- versus intrahepatic CCA) and early-onset CCA. RESULTS: Genotype distributions were consistent with the Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium. No significant differences in either allele or genotype distributions were detected between the CCA and control groups or the respective subgroups investigated. However, there was a trend for a protective effect of the heterozygous single-nucleotide polymorphism state GC, as indicated by an underrepresentation in the CCA group in general (29% vs 35%; P=0.18) and, in particular, for extrahepatic tumor sites (26% vs 35%; OR=0.67; 95% CI, 0.43-1.02; P=0.065). CONCLUSIONS: Our data do not support a prominent contribution of the pre-miR-146a sequence variant in the genetic predisposition to CCA. However, current studies functionally characterizing rs2910164 have proposed that distinct repertoires of target genes are addressed by genotype-specific mature miR-146a species. Given the detected trend towards a potentially protective role of GC heterozygosity, a subtle modulation of genetic CCA risk by the pre-miR-146a GC genotype may exist and should be evaluated further.
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