Abstract
Background A raised plasma factor VII (FVII) level is a risk factor for coronary heart disease. DNA variants have been described to be associated with alteration in FVII levels. The prevalence of FVII polymorphisms is unknown in the Tunisian Arab population. Methods In a group of 240 healthy Tunisians, we examined the relationship between levels of FVII coagulant activity (FVIIc) and two polymorphisms in the FVII gene. One polymorphism alters arginine at position 353 to glutamine (R/Q) and the other is a 10 base pair insertion (0/10 bp). Results The FVII distribution was in accordance with the Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium. The allele frequencies of Q and 10 bp were 0.212 and 0.235, respectively. There were significant differences in these allelic frequencies between Tunisian and other populations ( p<0.001). We observed lower FVIIc levels among subjects with the Q allele compared to RR subjects (RR: 98.17%, RQ/QQ: 57.41%, p<0.0001). For the 0/10 polymorphism, no statistically difference was observed. Conclusion The prevalence of the Q allele which was found to be associated with lower plasma FVIIc levels is high in Tunisian population. Further analyses should yield information on the protective role of carrying the Q allele for coronary heart disease.
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