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Polymorphisms in Toll-Like Receptor 4 Are Not Associated with Asthma or Atopy-related Phenotypes
163
Citations
45
References
2002
Year
AsthmaGeneticsImmunologyGenetic EpidemiologyHuman PolymorphismAllergenInnate ImmunityImmune-related Gene PolymorphismEndotoxin ExposureGenome-wide Association StudyToll-like ReceptorsPublic HealthTlr4 VariantsAllergyAutoimmune DiseaseStatistical GeneticsAutoimmunityGenetic FactorAtopy-related PhenotypesToll-like Receptor 4EpidemiologyTlr4 LocusAllelic VariantMedicine
Toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) is the principal receptor for bacterial endotoxin recognition, and functional variants in the gene confer endotoxin-hyporesponsiveness in humans. Furthermore, there is evidence that endotoxin exposure during early life is protective against the development of atopy and asthma, although this relationship remains poorly understood. It is therefore possible that genetic variation in the TLR4 locus contributes to asthma susceptibility. In this study we characterize the genetic diversity in the TLR4 locus and test for association between the common genetic variants and asthma-related phenotypes. In a cohort of 90 ethnically diverse subjects, we resequenced the TLR4 locus and identified a total of 29 single nucleotide polymorphisms. We assessed five common polymorphisms for evidence of association with asthma in two large family-based cohorts: a heterogeneous North American cohort (589 families), and a more homogenous population from northeastern Quebec, Canada (167 families). Using the transmission-disequilibrium test, we found no evidence of association for any of the polymorphisms tested, including two functional variants. Furthermore, we found no evidence for association between the TLR4 variants and four quantitative intermediate asthma- and atopy-related phenotypes. Based on these results, we found no evidence that genetic variation in TLR4 contributes to asthma susceptibility.
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