Abstract

A polymorphic pentanucleotide microsatellite sequence (TGYCC)n within the p53-inducible gene 3 (PIG3) promoter is correlated with the extent of transcriptional activation by p53 and thought to modulate susceptibility to cancer. Using a PCR-silver staining-based single-strand conformation assay, we visualized variant genotypes of the PIG3 promoter (TGYCC)n motif in a subset of 100 subjects for each of four ethnic groups: non-Hispanic whites, African Americans, Hispanic Americans and Native Chinese. We found that PIG3 (TGYCC)15 was the most common allele but less frequent in non-Hispanic whites (0.660) than in Chinese (0.785) (P = 0.016). In an additional study of 616 patients with squamous cell carcinoma of the head and neck (SCCHN) and 623 cancer-free controls in a non-Hispanic white population, we found that compared with those who were PIG3 (TGYCC)15 homozygotes, subjects without the PIG3 (TGYCC)15 allele had a significantly increased SCCHN risk [adjusted odds ratio (OR) = 1.34; 95% CI = 1.04-1.73 for heterozygotes and OR = 1.69; 95% CI = 1.18-2.44 for variant homozygotes] in an allele-dose response manner (P = 0.002). Consistently, subsequent luciferase reporter assay revealed that the wild-type (TGYCC)15 allele had the highest p53-mediated transcriptional activity, compared with the other (TGYCC)n motifs. Our data suggest that the PIG3 variant polymorphic repeats alleles other than (TGYCC)15 may affect p53 binding and thus may be a marker for susceptibility to SCCHN, but our findings need to be validated in larger studies.

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