“…Several of the GST family subgroup genes, including GST mu 1 ( GSTM1 ), GST pi 1 ( GSTP1 ), and GST theta 1 ( GSTT1 ), are highly polymorphic (Loktionov et al, 2001). Sequence variation in these genes has also been associated with an increased or decreased risk for several cancers and chronic diseases, including colorectal cancer (Loktionov et al, 2001), esophageal cancer (Sharma et al, 2013), renal cell carcinoma (Cheng, You, & Zhou, 2012; Yang et al, 2013), acute leukemia (Ye & Song, 2005), prostate cancer (Harries, Stubbins, Forman, Howard, & Wolf, 1997; Kote-Jarai et al, 2001; Liu, Liu, Ran, Shang, & Li, 2013; Safarinejad, Shafiei, & Safarinejad, 2011; Taioli et al, 2011; Wei et al, 2013), type-2 diabetes mellitus (Dadbinpour, Sheikhha, Darbouy, & Afkhami-Ardekani, 2013; Ramprasath et al, 2011), asthma (Tamer et al, 2004), and neurodevelopmental disorders such as ASD (Buyske et al, 2006). The variants in GSTM1 and GSTT1 examined here are insertion-deletion polymorphisms, and the homozygous deletions or null genotypes indicate that activities or functionality of these genes are reduced or interrupted completely (Ye, Song, Higgins, Pharoah, & Danesh, 2006).…”