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Original Articles

rs12603332 is associated with male asthma patients specifically in urban areas of Lahore, Pakistan

, PhD ORCID Icon, , PhD, , MBBS, , MPhil, , MSc, , MPhil, , MPhil, , PhD, , MPhil & , PhD show all
Pages 887-892 | Received 26 Aug 2016, Accepted 26 Dec 2016, Published online: 10 Feb 2017
 

ABSTRACT

Objective: rs12603332, an important regulatory site variant, is known to alter the regulatory motif E2A that is involved in the maturation of B-lymphocytes. The study was designed to check whether different environmental exposures alter its risk allele association with asthma or not. Methods: 200 Physician-diagnosed asthma patients and 108 healthy individuals were enrolled from hospitals of Lahore. After quantitation of DNA extracted from peripheral blood, amplification of genomic region with rs12603332, followed by single base extension (SBE), was performed. Allele and genotype frequencies were calculated by SHEsis and Haploview software packages. Statistical analyses on PLINK were also performed, taking different factors as covariates. HaploReg analysis was done to predict the effect of risk allele on different regulatory motifs. Results: Risk allele for rs12603332 i.e., “C” allele was found to be significantly associated with male patients residing in urban localities. Conclusion: The finding suggests that on exposure with urban environment, risk allele carriers tend to develop asthma symptoms via epigenetic regulation of motif associated with maturation of B-lymphocytes.

Acknowledgements

We are grateful to Dr. David Eccles (Gringene Bioinformatics) for his expert advice on the statistical analysis carried out in this study. We gratefully acknowledge the cooperation of the individuals who participated in this study.

Declaration of interest

The authors declare that they have no conflict of interests.

Funding

The authors are thankful to Higher Education Commission, Pakistan for sponsoring this study.

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