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American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 2008-Oct

Nutrigenetic association of the 5-lipoxygenase gene with myocardial infarction.

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Hooman Allayee
Ana Baylin
Jaana Hartiala
Hemani Wijesuriya
Margarete Mehrabian
Aldons J Lusis
Hannia Campos

Keywords

Abstract

BACKGROUND

5-Lipoxygenase (5-LO) catalyzes the rate-limiting step of the biosynthesis of proinflammatory leukotrienes from arachidonic acid (AA) and has been associated with atherosclerosis in animal models and humans. We previously reported that variants of a 5-LO promoter repeat polymorphism were associated with carotid atherosclerosis in humans, an effect that was exacerbated by high dietary AA but mitigated by high dietary n-3 fatty acids.

OBJECTIVE

We sought to confirm these initial observations with a more clinically relevant phenotype such as myocardial infarction (MI).

METHODS

The 5-LO polymorphism was genotyped in 1885 Costa Rican case-control pairs and tested for association with MI. Functional experiments were carried out to determine whether the associated alleles had differences in mRNA expression.

RESULTS

The frequency of variant genotype groups did not differ significantly between cases and controls. However, a significant gene x diet interaction was observed, in which, relative to the common 5 repeat allele, the 3 and 4 alleles were associated with a higher MI risk in the high (> or = 0.25 g/d) dietary AA group (odds ratio: 1.31; 95% CI: 1.07, 1.61) and with a lower risk in the low (<0. 25 g/d) AA group (0.77; 0.63, 0.94) (P for interaction = 0.015). Using allele-specific quantitation, the short alleles had expression approximately twice that of the 5 allele (P < 0.0001).

CONCLUSIONS

The 3 and 4 variants lead to higher 5-LO expression and provide additional evidence that these alleles are associated with greater risks of atherosclerosis and MI in the context of a high-AA diet.

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