Abstract

Interleukin (IL)-21, which is secreted by activated CD4(+) T cells and NKT cells, has been found to be able to influence the humoral and cell-mediated immune responses and have potent antitumor activity in animal models. This study was to investigate the impact of genetic polymorphisms in IL-21 on survival of breast cancer. Four TagSNPs of IL-21 (rs12508721C>T, rs907715G>A, rs13143866G>A, rs2221903A>G) were selected and then genotyped in 891 patients with breast cancer in Eastern and Southern Chinese populations. We then examined the associations between these SNPs and overall survival. Potential function of rs12508721C>T and association between this variation and breast cancer prognosis were further studied. Overall, 121 of the patients had died over the followed-up period of 5years. The IL-21 rs12508721T allele predicted longer five-year survival (HR=0.347, 95% CI=0.187-0.644, P<0.0001) in the discovery cohort, the independent validation cohort (HR=0.429, 95% CI=0.244-0.755, P=0.012), and combined group (HR=0.447, 95% CI=0.301-0.667, P<0.0001). Furthermore, our luciferase assay revealed that rs12508721T variant allele had a higher transcription activity and the RT-PCR and ELISA assay showed that rs12508721 variant genotypes (CT and TT) carriers have more IL-21 expression than CC carriers (P<0.05). Our present study established a robust association between the functional polymorphism (rs12508721C>T) in IL-21 and prognosis of breast cancer, indicating that this polymorphism may be a potential biomarker for prognosis of breast cancer.

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