Abstract
HIF-1α gene polymorphisms, including rs11549465, rs11549467, rs1957757 and rs10873142, cause liver cell damage or pulmonary disease. The aim of this study was to analyse the association between the polymorphisms of the loci of the HIF-1α gene and its CpG island methylation in the promoter region with the risk of anti-tuberculosis drug-induced liver injury (ADLI). 286 patients with tuberculosis (TB) and ADLI (case group) and 286 patients with TB but without liver injury (control group) were matched one-to-one, among the 1728 TB patients recruited from July 2019 to July 2020. Genotyping of the four loci of the HIF-1α gene was confirmed using PCR-RFLP technology. Methylation of the HIF-1α gene was measured using the MSP method. The comparison of risk factors, HIF-1α genotype and methylation status between the case group and the control group was all achieved through univariate and multivariate conditional logistic regression. Univariate analysis showed that the frequency of rs1957757 mutation genotype and CpG island methylation was significantly higher in the case group than in the control group (P<0.001, all). In contrast, there was no statistical difference in the frequency of mutated genotypes at the other three loci between the two groups (p=0.21, p=0.12 and p=0.55, respectively). Further, multivariate analysis showed that CpG islands were methylated, the mutation genotype of the rs1957757 locus was independently associated with the high risk of ADLI, and the adjusted OR (95%CI) reached 1.92 (1.32-2.63) and 2.01 (1.32-2.83), respectively. Furthermore, taking the rs1957757 locus wild genotype and CpG islands without methylation as the reference group, the mutation genotype and CpG island methylation increased the risk of ADLI, and the probability of ADLI could reach 4.73 times that of the reference group. This is the first demonstration of the association of HIF-1α gene polymorphism and CpG island methylation with ADLI risk stratification. The interaction between CpG islands methylated in the promoter region of the HIF-1α gene and its rs1957757 locus mutant genotype was associated with a higher risk of ADLI.
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