CASP7 variants modify susceptibility to cervical cancer in Chinese women.

dc.contributor.author

Shi, Ting-Yan

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He, Jing

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Wang, Meng-Yun

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Zhu, Mei-Ling

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Yu, Ke-Da

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Shao, Zhi-Ming

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Sun, Meng-Hong

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Wu, Xiaohua

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Cheng, Xi

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Wei, Qingyi

dc.date.accessioned

2019-02-01T15:29:52Z

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2019-02-01T15:29:52Z

dc.date.issued

2015-01

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2019-02-01T15:29:50Z

dc.description.abstract

Polymorphisms in Caspase-7 (CASP7) may modulate the programmed cell death and thus contribute to cervical cancer risk. In this case-control study of 1,486 cervical cancer cases and 1,301 controls, we investigated associations between four potentially functional polymorphisms in CASP7 and cervical cancer risk and evaluated their locus-locus interaction effects on the risk. The genotype-phenotype correlation was performed by a generalized linear regression model. We found that the rs4353229 polymorphism was associated with cervical cancer risk (under a recessive model: crude OR = 1.20, 95% CI = 1.02-1.40). Compared with the TT genotype, the rs10787498GT genotype was associated with an increased cervical cancer risk (adjusted OR = 1.19, 95% CI = 1.00-1.41). Combination analysis showed that subjects with four putative risk genotypes had a 1.54-fold increased cancer risk, compared with those who carried three or less putative risk genotypes. We also observed significant locus-locus joint effects on the risk, which may be mediated by the polymorphisms regulating CASP7 mRNA expression. Subsequent multifactor dimensionality reduction and classification and regression tree analyses indicated that the CASP7 genotypes might have a locus-locus interaction effect that modulated cervical cancer risk. Out data suggest that CASP7 polymorphisms may interact to modify cervical cancer risk by a possible mechanism of regulating CASP7 mRNA expression.

dc.identifier

srep09225

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2045-2322

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2045-2322

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/18031

dc.language

eng

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Springer Science and Business Media LLC

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Scientific reports

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10.1038/srep09225

dc.subject

Humans

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Disease Susceptibility

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Genetic Predisposition to Disease

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RNA, Messenger

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Logistic Models

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Odds Ratio

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Case-Control Studies

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Genotype

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Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide

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Alleles

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China

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Uterine Cervical Neoplasms

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Female

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Caspase 7

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Genetic Loci

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Genetic Association Studies

dc.title

CASP7 variants modify susceptibility to cervical cancer in Chinese women.

dc.type

Journal article

duke.contributor.orcid

Wei, Qingyi|0000-0002-3845-9445

pubs.begin-page

9225

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1

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School of Medicine

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Duke

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Duke Cancer Institute

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Institutes and Centers

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Population Health Sciences

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Basic Science Departments

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Medicine, Medical Oncology

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Medicine

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Clinical Science Departments

pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

5

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