Gene Polymorphism Of TNF-A (Rs1799964) In Aborted Women With Respiratory Disease In Al-Diwaniyah Province

Authors

  • Fatima tawfik alkhuzaie Department of Biology, College of Science , University of Al-Qadisiyah , Al- Diwaniayh , Iraq.
  • Habeeb waseel shubber Department of Biology, College of Science , University of Al-Qadisiyah , Al- Diwaniayh , Iraq.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.70135/seejph.vi.1138

Keywords:

Aborted Women, TNF-Α , Polymorphism (SNP), Respiratory Diseases

Abstract

Background: TNF-α, a proinflammatory cytokine, plays a significant role in the etiology of various illnesses. The encoding gene is found on chromosome 6's short arm in the major histocompatibility complex class III region. Polymorphisms in the TNF-α gene promoter region are believed to impact illness susceptibility and severity. This review summarizes the research on the association between TNF-α gene and receptor polymorphisms and respiratory illness development. This study aim to determine of gene polymorphism of TNF-α in aborted women with respiratory diseases.

Methods : The study was carried out for 100 pregnant women, including 60 aborted women with and without respiratory diseases, and 40 women as healthy control group. Genotypes in TNF-α T>C SNPs were identified using self- designed nested T-ARMS PCR tests. Sequencing validated randomly chosen PCR results that represented unique genotypes in TNF-α SNPs.

Results : The results of TNF-α (rs1799964) C/T SNP genotyping between aborted women with respiratory diseases and healthy control revealed that the heterozygous C/T genotype was a significant risk factor with an OR of 6.28, while the homozygous TT genotype was non-significant (OR= 2.09).

Conclusion : The rs1799964 TNF-α polymorphisms are possible genetic risk factors of respiratory diseases and might be its predictive markers.

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Published

2024-09-30

How to Cite

alkhuzaie, F. tawfik, & shubber, H. waseel. (2024). Gene Polymorphism Of TNF-A (Rs1799964) In Aborted Women With Respiratory Disease In Al-Diwaniyah Province. South Eastern European Journal of Public Health, 340–344. https://doi.org/10.70135/seejph.vi.1138

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