Research Article Details

Article ID: A26696
PMID: 19940802
Source: Pharmacogenet Genomics
Title: The nuclear receptor PXR gene variants are associated with liver injury in nonalcoholic fatty liver disease.
Abstract: OBJECTIVE: To explore the contribution of gene variants and derived haplotypes of the pregnane X receptor (NR1I2) to the severity of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD). METHODS: A total of 290 individuals were evaluated in a case-control association study, including 188 NAFLD patients with different stages of disease severity and 102 healthy individuals. Four tag single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs; rs12488820 C/T, rs2472671 C/T, rs2461823 A/G, and rs1054191 A/G) encompassing 36 kb in chromosome 3 and representing 33 polymorphic sites (r2>0.8) were genotyped. Four additional SNPs (rs3814055, rs3814057, rs6785049, and rs7643645) were also included because they showed earlier evidence of functionality. RESULTS: Genotypic tests for single SNPs showed that rs7643645 and rs2461823 were significantly associated with disease severity by ordinal multinomial analysis (P<0.0015 and 0.039, respectively). A significant association was also observed under the additive model for both variants (P<0.00038 and 0.012, respectively). Consistent with the analysis of individual markers, we observed that the multimarker composed of rs2461823/A-rs7643645/G was significantly associated with disease severity (P<6.9 x 10(-5), beta: 0.45). In addition, the rs7643645/G variant was significantly associated with ALT level (P<0.026), a surrogate marker of severe liver injury. Finally, in univariate analysis rs7643645/G was significantly associated with fatty liver disease (P<0.04), with an odds ratio of 1.457 (95% confidence interval: 1.018-2.086). CONCLUSION: Our study suggests that pregnane X receptor polymorphisms and related haplotypes may contribute to disease severity in NAFLD by influencing the individual susceptibility to progress to more severe stages of the disease.
DOI: 10.1097/FPC.0b013e328333a1dd