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Title: Evaluation of death pathway genes FAS and FASL polymorphisms in chronic HBV infection. Author: Zamani AG, Barlas IO, Durakbasi-Dursun G, Ural O, Erdal E, Yildirim MS. Journal: Int J Immunogenet; 2013 Dec; 40(6):482-7. PubMed ID: 23560484. Abstract: This study was designed to determine the possible asssociation between selected FAS and FASLG polymorphisms and Hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection. FAS-670 G/A, FAS-1377 G/A, FASLG-844 T/C and FASLG IVS2nt-124 A/G polymorphisms were genotyped by polymerase chain reaction and restriction fragment length polymorphism (PCR-RFLP). A total of age and sex matched 108 controls and a hundred chronic HBV patients were recruited to conduct a case-control study. FAS-670 polymorphism was associated with chronic HBV infection (P = 0.03) FAS-1377 GG, GA and AA genotypes among the cases (90%, 5% and 5%, respectively) were significantly different from those among the controls (68%, 31.5% and 5.6%; P = 0.00). FASLG-844 allele distribution was similar between the groups (P = 0.17) but TC genotype (67.3%) was frequent in chronic HBV patients, while CC genotype was found significantly higher (29.6%) in controls. No association between FASLG IVS2nt-124 polymorphism and chronic HBV infection could be identified (P = 0.55). FAS-670 polymorphism is associated with chronic HBV infection, while FASLG IVS2nt-124 A/G polymorphism is not. The FAS-1377G/A and FASLG-844 T/C genotypes are likely to play a substantial role in HBV infection. Further studies evaluating polymorphisms in other genes related with apoptosis are needed to elucidate the role of genetic variation in HBV infection.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]