In several cases the method has been applied to milk products which were also assayed for riboflavin by means of chicks. The chick assays upon six samples gave an average value of 21.2 micrograms per gram. An average value of 21.5 micrograms per gram was obtained by the photometric test. The method presented in this paper is preferred because of its rapidity, and because biological assays may be complicated at times by the presence or absence of nutritional factors which are not as yet clearly defined.
Recently, we described the association of genetic variation in the discs large homolog 5 (DLG5) gene with inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) in a large European study sample (Stoll et al. in Nat Genet 36:476-480, 2004). Here, we report that the R30Q variant constitutes a susceptibility factor for Crohn disease (CD) in men [odds ratio (OR)=2.49, 95% confidence interval (CI) 1.53-4.06, P<0.001] but not women (OR=1.01, 95% CI=0.70-1.45, P=0.979) using multivariate logistic regression analyses in a unified study sample from Germany, Italy and Quebec. R30Q is a significant predictor for CD in men even when accounting for CARD15 and IBD5 risk variants (adjusted OR=2.41, 95% CI=1.41-4.12, P=0.001). The observed association is driven by a gender-dependent transmission ratio distortion (TRD) among healthy controls (frequency of Q allele: men 5.2%, women 11.3%), an effect that is offset in CD patients (frequency of Q allele: men 10.1%, women 10.9%). This finding is further substantiated by two non-IBD study samples, one of which consists of a newborn screening sample (newborn males 7.1%; newborn females 11%, P=0.036). Further investigation of the observed TRD may contribute towards enlightening the role of DLG5 in physiological processes influencing transmission of chromosomes to the surviving offspring, which, in turn, may help in understanding its implication in the development of CD among men.
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