Most lymphocytes in the lamina propria of oral lichen planus (OLP) lesions express and secrete interferon-gamma (IFN-gamma) and tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha), whereas they do not secret interleukin-4 and -10 or transforming growth factor-beta. We analyzed whether the polymorphisms of several cytokines may influence the susceptibility to OLP. Cytokine typing was performed by a sequence-specific PCR assay. Thirteen cytokine genes with 22 single-nucleotide polymorphisms were studied. IFN-gamma UTR 5644 genotype frequencies showed a significant increase in number of T/T homozygotes in OLP patients compared with controls (40.9 vs. 22.9%; p=0.0022). Moreover, in OLP patients, the frequency of the -308A TNF-alpha allele was higher than in the controls (21.6 vs. 9.3%; p < 0.05) causing a significantly increased frequency of the genotype G/A in OLP (43.2 vs. 14.3%; p=0.0002). Because in patients with mucocutaneous lichen planus (LP), the frequency of the -308A TNF-alpha allele was more than double the values in the pure OLP patients (40.9 vs. 15.1%; p=0.003), the -308G/A TNF-alpha genotype showed a significantly higher frequency in patients with mucocutaneous LP than in patients with pure OLP (81.8 vs. 30.3%, p=0.003). In conclusion, we suggest that genetic polymorphism of the first intron of the promoter gene of IFN-gamma may be an important risk factor to develop oral lesions of LP, whereas an increase in the frequency of -308A TNF-alpha allele may best contribute to the development of additional skin involvement.
(1) The microgeographic structure of Sardinia, well documented from a historical and linguistic point of view, further supported by archaeological evidence, can also be dissected at the genetic level: gene frequencies show heterogeneities which are statistically significant. (2) Dendrogram analyses performed with different methods lead to the same result: even if gene frequencies cluster linguistically defined geographic domains in agreement with historical and archaeological evidence, no phylogenetic tree can be inferred, very likely because the assumptions which allow a phylogenetic tree to be a valid model of evolution (mainly constant evolutionary rates and independence between branches) do not apply to the genetic history of Sardinia. (3) Evidence of a qualitative association between distribution of genes and distribution of languages or dialects seems to emerge also at the microgeographic level of our analysis. More linguistic and genetic data are planned to be considered.
Statistical techniques for displaying the geographical distribution of many genes in few synthetic images have been used to represent the various patterns of gene frequencies in Europe and in the world (Menozzi et al. 1978; Piazza et al. 1981 a). It has also been shown that such synthetic displays are particularly useful in detecting clines of genetic differentiation associated with movements of populations like those accompanying the Neolithic expansion of farmers from the Near East or, in more recent times, the putative diffusion of Indo-European-speaking populations (Ammerman & Cavalli-Sforza, 1984; Gimbutas, 1973). In this paper we use the same combination of statistical and graphical techniques to study the genetic structure of Italy, a European country whose unity of people and cultures was quite a recent event. The possibility of studying genetic differentiation in a small geographical area is tested and trends of genetic differences are tentatively interpreted in terms of historic and linguistic knowledge. The few demographic pieces of information taken from historical sources and compared with linguistic records support the hypothesis that the genetic structure of Italy still reflects the ethnic stratification of pre-Roman times.
Background Recent controlled studies have confirmed that hepatitis C virus (HCV) is the main correlate of liver disease in patients with lichen planus (LP), mainly in southern Europe and Japan. However, a low prevalence of HCV infection has been found in LP patients in England and northern France, and significant differences in serum HCV RNA levels or HCV genotypes have not been found between LP patients and controls. Thus host rather than viral factors may be prevalent in the pathogenesis of HCV-related LP. The HLA-DR allele may influence both the outcome of HCV infection and the appearance of symptoms outside the liver. Objectives To assess whether major histocompatibility complex class II alleles play a part in the development of HCV-related LP. Methods Intermediate-resolution DRB typing by hybridization with oligonucleotide probes was performed in 44 consecutive Italian oral LP (OLP) patients with HCV infection (anti-HCV and HCV RNA positive), in an age, sex and clinically comparable disease control group of 60 Italian OLP patients without HCV infection (anti-HCV and HCV RNA negative), and in 145 healthy unrelated Italian bone marrow donors without evidence of liver disease or history of LP and with negative tests for HCV. Results Patients with exclusive OLP and HCV infection possessed the HLA-DR6 allele more frequently than patients with exclusive OLP but without HCV infection (52% vs. 18%, respectively; P c (P corrected ) 0´028, relative risk 4´93). We did not find any relationship between mucocutaneous LP, HCV infection and HLA-DR alleles. Conclusions HCV-related OLP therefore appears to be a distinctive subset particularly associated with the HLA class II allele HLA-DR6. This could partially explain the peculiar geographical heterogeneity of the association between HCV and LP.
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