Publication | Open Access
Functional consequences of the prothrombotic SERPINC1 rs2227589 polymorphism on antithrombin levels
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Citations
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References
2009
Year
GeneticsGenetic EpidemiologyHuman PolymorphismPathologyMolecular GeneticsImmune-related Gene PolymorphismThrombosisHematologyFunctional ConsequencesPublic HealthMolecular DiagnosticsProteomicsDna Length PolymorphismAntithrombin LevelsVascular BiologyGenetic FactorEpidemiologyAllelic VariantGenetic DisorderPromoter PolymorphismMedicine
Genetic factors involved in the interindividual variability of antithrombin have not been identified. We studied two polymorphisms of the gene coding for antithrombin (SER-PINC1) in 298 Spanish Caucasian blood donors: rs3138521, a DNA length polymorphism located on the promoter region and rs2227589, a SNP located on intron 1 that has been described as a mild thrombotic risk factor. We detected a complete linkage disequilibrium between these polymorphisms (D'=0.999). The rs3138521 polymorphism has no functional consequences. However, the rs2227589 SNP significantly associated with plasma anti-FXa activity and antithrombin levels: carriers of the A allele had slightly but significantly lower anticoagulant activity and levels than GG subjects (97.0+/-7.3% vs. 94.6+/-8.4%; p=0.032; 99.5+/-5.8% vs. 94.8+/-5.6%; p=0.001; respectively). Our results identified a functional effect of the rs2227589 polymorphism not explained by its linkage with the promoter polymorphism that support the moderate thrombotic risk associated with the A allele.
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