Abstract

Recently, a large case-control study (2,851 cases and 2,592 controls) reported that a functional single nuclear polymorphism (SNP) in the proteasome subunit alpha type 6 gene (PSMA6) conferred a risk of myocardial infarction (MI) in a Japanese population. The SNP (exon 1, -8C/G) is located in the 5' untranslated region of exon 1, and the risk-conferring allele G appears to enhance the transcription of PSMA6, which may exaggerate inflammation through activation of nuclear factor-kappa beta protein. The frequency of the risk conferring genotype (GG) in cases was reported to be greater than that in controls (12.4% vs 8.9%). The purpose of the present study was to validate this observation in our study population. Subjects with MI (n=433) were recruited from the outpatient clinic of the National Cardiovascular Center. Control subjects (n=2,186) were recruited from the Suita study. The frequencies of the GG genotype did not significantly differ between the control (9.8%) and MI groups (10.6%). Moreover, this genotype was not associated with C reactive protein levels in the Suita study. However, the GG genotype was significantly associated with greater intima-media thickness (n=2,051, p=0.015) after adjusting for blood pressure, sex, body mass index and age in the Suita study. The reported genotype in PSMA6 appears not to contribute appreciably to MI, but may contribute slightly to atherosclerosis in the present study population.

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