Publication | Open Access
Nasopharyngeal carcinoma–susceptibility locus is localized to a 132 kb segment containing HLA‐A using high‐resolution microsatellite mapping
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Citations
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References
2005
Year
HistocompatibilityNpc SusceptibilityGeneticsImmunologyGenetic EpidemiologyPathologyHuman PolymorphismNpc- Susceptibility GenesImmune-related Gene PolymorphismNasopharyngeal Carcinoma–susceptibility LocusHigh‐resolution Microsatellite MappingPublic HealthMolecular DiagnosticsCancer ResearchMedicineStatistical GeneticsCancer GeneticsNpc-susceptibility LocusAllelic VariantKb SegmentCancer GenomicsHla TypingOncology
Nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) is an epithelial tumor uniquely prevalent in southern Chinese. HLA-A2 is associated with NPC. In a previous study, we showed that the genes associated with susceptibility to NPC are primarily located within the HLA-A locus in Taiwanese NPC patients. However, the pathogenic genes causing NPC susceptibility remain unknown. Here, 8 polymorphic microsatellite markers distributed over a 1 megabase region surrounding the HLA-A locus were subjected to genetic analysis for the NPC-susceptibility locus. Statistical studies of associated alleles detected on each microsatellite locus showed that the NPC- susceptibility genes are most likely located between the D6S510 and D6S211 markers within a 132 kb segment containing the HLA-A locus. These results undoubtedly would facilitate the further positional cloning of the NPC-susceptibility locus, which has been elusive for the past 30 years.
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