DOD
Search
Discussions
Biomedical Jobmarket
News
DOD Alert
Edit DOD
 
ACCOUNT
Login
Register
Forgotten Password?
 
 
Relation between the tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) gene and protein expression, and clinical, biochemical, and genetic markers: age, body mass index and uric acid are independent predictors for an elevated TNF-alpha plasma level in a complex risk model
 
Diabetes OD > Diabetes Pathogenesis > T1DM > Risk Factors and Susceptibility > Journal Article

(Journal Article): Relation between the tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) gene and protein expression, and clinical, biochemical, and genetic markers: age, body mass index and uric acid are independent predictors for an elevated TNF-alpha plasma level in a complex risk model
 
Schulz S, Schagdarsurengin U, Suss T, Mller-Werdan U, Werdan K, Glaser C (Institute of Human Genetics and Medical Biology Department of Medicine III, Martin-Luther-Universitat Halle-Wittenberg)
 
IN: Eur Cytokine Netw 2004; 15(2):105-111
Impact Factor(s) of Eur Cytokine Netw: 1.747 (2004), 2.153 (2002), 1.677 (2001)

Fulltext:    HTML 

ABSTRACT: Background: Tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) has been implicated in the pathogenesis of numerous complex diseases. The plasma level of this pro-inflammatory cytokine is associated with a variety of different risk factors, but little is known about the genetic background and the complex interactions. Methods: in this clinical study, correlations were studied between plasma levels of circulating TNF-alpha protein (ELISA), its mRNA expression in monocytes (RT-PCR) and genetic variants of TNF-alpha gene (SSCP), with several diseases, including obesity, atherosclerosis, diabetes mellitus, hypertension, as well as risk factors such as age, gender, inflammatory markers, the coagulation\fibrinolysis balance, and lipid metabolism. One hundred and ninety four clinically and biochemically well-characterized patients were enrolled. Results: At the transcriptional level, measured in monocytes, no association with any clinical or biochemical parameter investigated was found, including TNF-alpha protein level. Investigating the influence of genetic variants of the TNF-alpha gene on mRNA and protein levels, only one promoter polymorphism, namely c.-238G > A, was shown to be associated with transcriptional but not with translational expression. However, at the translational level, significant positive, but weak associations were determined for obesity (P -/+ 0.037), age (P -/+ 0.038), uric acid (P < 0.001), body mass index (P -/+ 0.01), plasminogen (P -/+ 0.013), and fibrinogen (P -/+ 0.002) in bivariate regression analyses, whereas HDL-cholesterol (P -/+ 0.005) was shown to be negatively correlated. However, investigating confounding effects in stepwise multivariate regression analysis, body mass index (P -/+ 0.009), uric acid (P -/+ 0.026) and age (P -/+ 0.037) turned out to be significantly associated with plasma levels of circulating TNF-alpha (adjusted R(2) -/+ 0.117; SE: 0.688).



 
Respond on this Journal Article!
Hint: Your Response should directly apply to Relation between the tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) gene and protein expression, and clinical, biochemical, and genetic markers: age, body mass index and uric acid are independent predictors for an elevated TNF-alpha plasma level in a complex risk model. Please check, if this context applies best to your contribution. Otherwise click HERE to change to the appropriate subject area. The actual subject area is Risk Factors and Susceptibility.