Abstract

Transforming growth factor beta (TGF-beta) is an example for a large and still-growing family of growth factors. TGF-beta1 is known to act both as a tumour suppressor and as a stimulator of tumour progression. This study examines the relationship amongst putative enhancer, promoter, 5'-untranslated-region (UTR) and exon-1 polymorphisms of the TGF-beta1 gene (region I from -1881 to -1613; region II from -1410 to -1123, and region III from -55 to +176, as per human genome organisation (HUGO) nomenclature) in 26 breast cancer patients and 97 healthy control subjects. The germline and somatic status of the four known polymorphisms was ascertained, and a significant difference was observed for the germline C/T and T/T genotype distribution between patients and controls in comparison to C/C genotypes at position -1349 (chi2 = 6.193; P = 0.009). In addition to the somatic variations observed for some of the regions studied, in 10/26 (38%) sporadic breast cancer cases, a novel somatic mutation in codon 47 of exon 1 (GenBank accession number AY059373) was also detected in tumour samples. The risk of cancer was found to be significant (OR = 4.525) for the -1349 C/T and T/T genotype background, suggesting that this genetic background may act as a risk factor for sporadic breast cancer.

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