An autoimmune etiology has been suggested for endometriosis mostly on the basis of an increased prevalence of autoimmune diseases in affected women. Cytotoxic T lymphocyte antigen (CTLA) 4 gene is recognized as a primary determinant for autoimmunity since specific polymorphisms have been associated with predisposition to most autoimmune disorders. This study was aimed to evaluate whether two variants of CTLA4 gene might be associated with endometriosis in an Italian population. We examined the +49A/G polymorphism and the CT60A/G dimorphism in n = 146 endometriosis subjects classified according to Holt and Weiss criteria. Controls were represented by n = 165 women without laparoscopic evidence of the disease. We found no statistically significant difference in the genotype frequencies between women with and without endometriosis. The proportion of the mutant G allele of the +49A/G polymorphism in the former and in the latter group resulted 34 and 30%, respectively. The proportion of the susceptible G allele of the CT60 A/G dimorphism resulted 51% in both groups. No association was demonstrated between the polymorphisms and the clinical forms of the disease and no susceptibility haplotypes were found. These findings suggest that endometriosis aetiology is not primarily associated with the development of CTLA4-linked autoimmunity.

Variants of the CTLA4 gene that segregate with autoimmune diseases are not associated with endometriosis / P. Viganò, D. Lattuada, E. Somigliana, A. Abbiati, M. Candiani, A.M. Di Blasio. - In: MOLECULAR HUMAN REPRODUCTION. - ISSN 1360-9947. - 11:10(2005 Oct), pp. 745-749.

Variants of the CTLA4 gene that segregate with autoimmune diseases are not associated with endometriosis

P. Viganò
Primo
;
D. Lattuada
Secondo
;
E. Somigliana;M. Candiani
Penultimo
;
2005

Abstract

An autoimmune etiology has been suggested for endometriosis mostly on the basis of an increased prevalence of autoimmune diseases in affected women. Cytotoxic T lymphocyte antigen (CTLA) 4 gene is recognized as a primary determinant for autoimmunity since specific polymorphisms have been associated with predisposition to most autoimmune disorders. This study was aimed to evaluate whether two variants of CTLA4 gene might be associated with endometriosis in an Italian population. We examined the +49A/G polymorphism and the CT60A/G dimorphism in n = 146 endometriosis subjects classified according to Holt and Weiss criteria. Controls were represented by n = 165 women without laparoscopic evidence of the disease. We found no statistically significant difference in the genotype frequencies between women with and without endometriosis. The proportion of the mutant G allele of the +49A/G polymorphism in the former and in the latter group resulted 34 and 30%, respectively. The proportion of the susceptible G allele of the CT60 A/G dimorphism resulted 51% in both groups. No association was demonstrated between the polymorphisms and the clinical forms of the disease and no susceptibility haplotypes were found. These findings suggest that endometriosis aetiology is not primarily associated with the development of CTLA4-linked autoimmunity.
English
Autoimmune; CTLA4; Endometriosis; Genetics; Polymorphism
Settore MED/40 - Ginecologia e Ostetricia
Articolo
Sì, ma tipo non specificato
ott-2005
Oxford University Press
11
10
745
749
Periodico con rilevanza internazionale
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Variants of the CTLA4 gene that segregate with autoimmune diseases are not associated with endometriosis / P. Viganò, D. Lattuada, E. Somigliana, A. Abbiati, M. Candiani, A.M. Di Blasio. - In: MOLECULAR HUMAN REPRODUCTION. - ISSN 1360-9947. - 11:10(2005 Oct), pp. 745-749.
none
Prodotti della ricerca::01 - Articolo su periodico
6
262
Article (author)
si
P. Viganò, D. Lattuada, E. Somigliana, A. Abbiati, M. Candiani, A.M. Di Blasio
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/5874
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