Abstract

Vitamin D deficiency has adverse effects on renal allograft outcomes, and polymorphisms of genes encoding vitamin D-binding protein (VDBP) and vitamin D receptor (VDR) are defined to play a role in these conditions. The goal of the current investigation was to evaluate the connection between those polymorphisms with acute rejection, viral infection history, and recipients’ vitamin D status. In this study, 115 kidney transplant recipients and 100 healthy individuals were included. VDR polymorphisms including FokI (rs2228570), Apal (rs7975232), BsmI (rs1544410), as well as VDBP (rs7040) polymorphisms were studied using high resolution melting (PCR-HRM) analysis among the studied groups. The frequency of G allele in Apal rs7975232 polymorphism in the kidney transplant recipients was 0.63 times lower than healthy individuals (p = 0.026). Further, the G allele frequency in VDBP rs7040 polymorphism was significantly lower in patients with allograft rejection (p = 0.002). Considering the incidence of viral infection, significant differences were identified between the frequencies of VDR FokI (OR = 2.035; 95% CI 1.06–2.89, p = 0.030) and VDBP rs7040 (OR = 0.40; 95% CI 0.24–0.67, p < 0.001) T alleles in the studied groups. Moreover, the VDBP rs7040 GG genotype distribution was low in the recipients with a history of viral infection (p = 0.004). VDR (FokI) and VDBP (rs7040) alleles and their genotype distribution are significantly associated with allograft outcomes including allograft rejection and viral infection in the studied population.

Highlights

  • The exclusion criteria were included age ranges beyond those inclusion limits, kidney allograft malfunction related to urologic problems such as obstruction and kidney stone, a history of kidney transplantation, and kidney recipients suffering from kidney failure due to systemic or organ-specific reasons

  • The results showed that the G allele frequency in rs7975232 polymorphism in the control group was significantly 0.63 times more than that of the case group (p = 0.026)

  • Our results showed that the vitamin D receptor (VDR) (FokI) and vitamin D-binding protein (VDBP) alleles and their genotype distribution were graft alleles outcome

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Summary

Introduction

Several studies have focused on the development of novel strategies to reduce transplantation rejection

Methods
Discussion
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