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Association of Genetic Polymorphisms in Long Noncoding RNA HOTTIP with Risk of Idiopathic Recurrent Spontaneous Abortion.

Authors :
Mirinejad, Shekoufeh
Salimi, Saeedeh
Sargazi, Saman
Heidari Nia, Milad
Sheervalilou, Roghayeh
Majidpour, Mahdi
Harati-Sadegh, Mahdiyeh
Sarhadi, Mohammad
Shahraki, Sheida
Ghasemi, Marzieh
Source :
Biochemical Genetics. Aug2024, Vol. 62 Issue 4, p2884-2906. 23p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

The clustered homeobox gene family known as the Hox family plays a fundamental role in the morphogenesis of the vertebrate's embryo. A long noncoding RNA (lncRNA), known as HOTTIP (HOXA transcript at the distal tip), has been functionally characterized and contributed to the pathogenesis of various conditions. The current case–control study was undertaken to examine the gene frequencies and shared alleles of the HOTTIP gene in Iranian participants with or without idiopathic recurrent spontaneous abortion (RSA). Both ARMS-PCR reaction and RFLP-PCR techniques were employed to detect three HOTTIP polymorphisms (rs2023843C/T, rs78248039A/T, and rs1859168C/A) in a DNA sample of 161 women with RSA and 177 healthy women. We found that the TT genotype of the HOTTIP rs2023843 C/T polymorphism was associated with a lower risk for idiopathic RSA. In contrast, the TT genotype of the HOTTIP rs78248039 A/T polymorphism was correlated with an enhanced risk of RSA. The presence of the A-allele for HOTTIP rs1859168 C/A polymorphism was associated with an increased risk for idiopathic RSA. Haplotype analysis showed that the T/T/A, C/T/A, T/T/C, and T/A/A haplotypes of rs2023843/rs78248039/rs1859168 enhanced RSA susceptibility. Computational analysis predicted that this lncRNA might act as a potential sponge for some microRNAs; therefore, affecting the expression of genes being targeted by them. In addition, both rs2023843 and rs1859168 variants could alter the local secondary structure of HOTTIP. Our results showed that HOTTIP rs2023843C/T, rs78248039A/T, and rs1859168C/A polymorphisms may confer genetic susceptibility to idiopathic RSA in an Iranian population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00062928
Volume :
62
Issue :
4
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Biochemical Genetics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
178774854
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10528-023-10571-x