CTLA-4 gene and susceptibility to human papillomavirus-16-associated cervical squamous cell carcinoma in Taiwanese women

Tsung-Hsien Su(Mackay Memorial Hospital), Tzu‐Yang Chang(Mackay Memorial Hospital), Yann‐Jinn Lee(Mackay Memorial Hospital), Chih‐Kai Chen(Mackay Memorial Hospital), Hsin‐Fu Liu(Mackay Memorial Hospital), Chen‐Chung Chu(Mackay Memorial Hospital), Marie Lin(Mackay Memorial Hospital), Pu-Tsui Wang(Mackay Memorial Hospital), Wen‐Chu Huang(Mackay Memorial Hospital), Tze-Chien Chen(Mackay Memorial Hospital), Yuh‐Cheng Yang(Mackay Memorial Hospital)
Carcinogenesis
March 6, 2007
Cited by 81Open Access
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Abstract

Human papillomavirus (HPV) is considered to be a necessary but not sufficient cause for cervical cancer. The host immunogenetic background plays an important role in the persistence of HPV infection and subsequent development of cervical cancer. Cytotoxic T-lymphocyte antigen-4 (CTLA-4) is a molecule expressed mainly on activated T cells and is important in the down-regulation of T-cell activation. The aim of this study was to determine if polymorphisms of the CTLA-4 gene are associated with HPV-induced cervical cancer in Taiwanese women. Polymerase chain reaction-restriction fragment length polymorphism was used to genotype -318 C/T, +49 A/G and CT60 A/G polymorphisms in 144 women with cervical squamous cell carcinoma (CSCC) and 378 ethnicity-matched healthy control women. The presence and genotypes of HPV in CSCC were determined by E6-, E7-based nested polymerase chain reaction. The frequency of C/T genotype of -318 C/T polymorphism was significantly higher in patients with HPV-16-positive CSCC compared with controls (odds ratio = 1.99, 95% confidence interval = 1.16-3.42, P(c) = 0.03). No significant associations were found for +49 A/G and CT60 A/G polymorphisms. Analysis of haplotypes, computationally inferred from genotype data, also revealed no significant differences in distribution among all subjects with CSCC, those with HPV-16-positive CSCC and controls. Our results suggest that the -318 C/T variant in the promoter region of the CTLA-4 gene is associated with HPV-16-associated CSCC in Taiwanese women.


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