Abstract

BackgroundLung cancer is the leading cause of cancer mortality in China. Given the ubiquitous nature of gene-to-gene interaction in lung carcinogenesis, we sought to evaluate five common polymorphisms from advanced glycosylation end product-specific receptor (RAGE) and apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease 1 (APE1) genes in association with lung cancer among Han Chinese.Methods and Results819 patients with lung cancer and 803 cancer-free controls were recruited from Qiqihar city. Genotypes of five examined polymorphisms (RAGE gene: rs1800625, rs1800624, rs2070600; APE1 gene: rs1760944, rs1130409) were determined by ligase detection reaction method. Data were analyzed by R software and multifactor dimensionality reduction (MDR). Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium was satisfied for all five polymorphisms. Overall differences in the genotype and allele distributions were significant for rs1800625 (Pgenotype<0.0005; Pallele<0.0005), rs2070600 (Pgenotype = 0.005; Pallele = 0.004) and rs1130409 (Pgenotype = 0.009; Pallele = 0.004) polymorphisms. Haplotype C-A-A (alleles in order of rs1800625, rs1800624 and rs2070600) of RAGE gene was overrepresented in patients, and conferred a 2.1-fold increased risk of lung cancer (95% confidence interval: 1.52–2.91), independent of confounding factors. Further application of MDR method to five examined polymorphisms identified the overall best interaction model including rs2070600 and rs1130409 polymorphisms. This model had a maximal testing accuracy of 64.63% and a maximal cross-validation consistency of 9 out of 10 at the significant level of 0.006.ConclusionsOur findings demonstrated a potential interactive contribution of RAGE and APE1 genes to the pathogenesis of lung cancer among Han Chinese. Further studies are warranted to confirm or refute these findings.

Highlights

  • Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer mortality in China, and its escalating prevalence presents a major public health challenge [1]

  • Our findings demonstrated a potential interactive contribution of RAGE and apyrimidinic endonuclease 1 (APE1) genes to the pathogenesis of lung cancer among Han Chinese

  • As the genomic sequences of RAGE and APE1 genes are highly polymorphic, it is of added interest to identify which genetic defect(s) might have functional potentials to affect the final bioavailability of these two genes, and to the pathogenesis of lung cancer

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer mortality in China, and its escalating prevalence presents a major public health challenge [1]. To shed some light on this issue, we, in this study, focused on two candidate genes, advanced glycosylation end product-specific receptor (RAGE) and apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease 1 (APE1), to explore their interactive association of common genetic defects with lung cancer risk. As the genomic sequences of RAGE and APE1 genes are highly polymorphic, it is of added interest to identify which genetic defect(s) might have functional potentials to affect the final bioavailability of these two genes, and to the pathogenesis of lung cancer. Given the ubiquitous nature of gene-to-gene interaction in lung carcinogenesis, we sought to evaluate five common polymorphisms from advanced glycosylation end product-specific receptor (RAGE) and apurinic/apyrimidinic endonuclease 1 (APE1) genes in association with lung cancer among Han Chinese

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call