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Neurogastroenterology and Motility 2010-Jul

G protein beta3 subunit, interleukin-10, and tumor necrosis factor-alpha gene polymorphisms in Koreans with irritable bowel syndrome.

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H-J Lee
S-Y Lee
J E Choi
J H Kim
I-K Sung
H S Park
C J Jin

Keywords

Abstract

BACKGROUND

The association between irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) based on Rome III criteria and G protein beta3 subunit (GNB3), interleukin (IL)-10, and tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-alpha gene polymorphisms is uncertain.

METHODS

Case and control subjects were recruited from Korean visitors to the Health Promotion Center and Digestive Disease Center for gastrointestinal endoscopy. G protein beta3 subunit, IL-10, and TNF-alpha gene polymorphisms were genotyped using a polymerase chain reaction-based method. Multifactor dimensionality reduction (MDR) analysis was used to assess gene-gene interactions.

RESULTS

Genotype and allele frequencies of GNB3 showed marginal significance between the healthy controls and IBS patients (chi(2) = 5.92, P = 0.052; chi(2) = 3.76, P = 0.053). G protein beta3 subunit T allele was more strongly correlated with IBS with constipation (12 of constipation-dominant type and 31 of mixed type) than with 51 diarrhea-dominant type and 88 normal subjects (chi(2) = 13.91, P = 0.008). Multifactor dimensionality reduction analysis revealed that there were no significant interactions of GNB3, IL-10, and TNF-alpha gene variants with susceptibility to IBS (P > 0.05).

CONCLUSIONS

The results suggest that GNB3 825T allele might be associated with IBS with constipation in Koreans.

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