Significance of -1082A/G polymorphism of IL10 gene for progression of colorectal cancer and IL-10 expression

Autor: Spaska Stanilova, Tashko S. Deliysky, Noyko Stanilov, Lyuba Miteva
Rok vydání: 2014
Předmět:
Zdroj: Tumour biology : the journal of the International Society for Oncodevelopmental Biology and Medicine. 35(12)
ISSN: 1423-0380
Popis: The role of functional polymorphism within IL10 (rs1800896) in colorectal cancer (CRC) still remains elusive. The aim of present study was to investigate the significance of -1082A/G polymorphism in IL10 on CRC risk, progression, and overall survival in a cohort of Bulgarian patients. Also, a functional role of this polymorphism on systemic and local level of IL10 mRNA quantity and serum IL-10 level was explored. A group of 119 patients with sporadic CRC and 154 age-sex-matched controls were genotyped by allele-specific PCR. The quantification of mRNA and serum IL-10 levels was performed by real-time PCR and ELISA assays, respectively. The genotype and allelic frequency among cases and controls was similar. However, we observed significant elevation of G-allele and GG-genotype frequencies among advanced CRC. G-allele was overrepresented in advanced CRC patients (49 %) compared to early CRC (35 %) with OR = 1.77; 95%CI 1.018 ÷ 3.083; P = 0.031. A significant upregulated expression of IL10 mRNA was observed among AG/GG-genotypes in tumor tissue compared to homozygous AA-genotype (RQ value 68.3 vs. 6.68; P = 0.0062). Also, GG-genotype of -1082A/G polymorphism in IL10 was positively associated with higher serum IL-10 among early CRC patients and controls, in contrast to advanced cases. Although, investigated polymorphism in IL10 has no significant impact of overall survival among Bulgarian CRC patients, we found a significant relationship of high pre-operative serum level of IL-10 with poor survival of CRC (P = 0.023). Our findings indicate a significant impact of -1082A/G polymorphism of IL10 on CRC progression, rather than genetic predisposition and prognosis of CRC.
Databáze: OpenAIRE