Aspirin-intolerant asthma (AIA) is a subtype of bronchial asthma characterized by development of bronchoconstriction evoked by non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs). NSAIDs inhibit the cyclooxygenase pathway, leading to enhancement of the lipoxygenase pathway. We evaluated allelic association of 370 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) of 63 candidate genes, mostly from the arachidonic acid metabolic cascade, with AIA. After two rounds of screening with 198 AIA patients, multiple SNPs in the prostaglandin E(2) receptor subtype 2 (EP2) gene were associated with AIA (P<0.05). Among the 77 SNPs identified in the EP2 gene, we selected 17 SNPs on the basis of linkage disequilibrium and allelic frequencies (minor allele frequency >0.1) for further association study. SNPs in the promoter region of the EP2 gene, uS5, uS5b, and uS7, were significantly associated with AIA (permutation P=0.039-0.001). Analysis of haplotypes constructed according to the LD pattern showed a significant association with AIA (permutation P=0.001). The most significantly associated SNP, uS5, located in the regulatory region of the EP2 gene, was in a STATs-binding consensus sequence [AIA 31.1% versus control 22.1% (permutation P=0.0016) or versus aspirin-tolerant asthma 22.2% (permutation P=0.0017)]. Although STAT1 binding was not observed in gel mobility shift assay with HeLa nuclear extract, an unidentified protein was specifically bound to the allelic sequence. In in vitro reporter assay in HCT116 cells, the site containing the uS5 allele showed reduced transcription activity. Taken together, these results suggest that uS5 allele serves as a target of a transcription repressor protein. A functional SNP of the EP2 gene associated with risk of AIA should decrease the transcription level, resulting in reduction of the PGE(2) braking mechanism of inflammation and involvement in the molecular mechanism underlying AIA.
These results indicate that INDO and IL1R2, which were identified from gene expression analyses of nasal polyps in AIA, represent susceptibility genes for AIA.
Multiple single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) within ADAM33 have been reported to be associated with asthma and bronchial hyper-responsiveness in Caucasian populations. We examined whether these SNPs contribute to a predisposition to asthma, especially aspirin-intolerant asthma (AIA), in the Japanese population. Ten polymorphic sites (ST+4, ST+7, T1, T2, T+1, V-3, V-2, V-1, V4, V5) were genotyped in 102 AIA patients, 282 aspirin-tolerant asthma (ATA) patients and 120 control (CTR) subjects by direct sequencing. Haplotype frequencies were estimated by the expectation-maximization method. Differences in allele and haplotype frequencies among phenotypes were analyzed by the chi-square and permutation tests. ST+7, V-1 and V5 sites in the AIA group were significantly different from those in the ATA group (P=0.034-0.004) and from those in the CTR group (P=0.019-0.002). Haplotypes at three sites (ST+7, V-1, and V5) were significantly different in frequency between the AIA and ATA (P=0.008) or CTR (P=0.001) groups. Sequence variations in ADAM33 are likely to correlate with susceptibility to AIA in the Japanese population.
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