• Chest · Feb 2015

    The MUC5B promoter polymorphism is associated with IPF in a Mexican cohort but is rare among Asian ancestries.

    • Anna L Peljto, Moises Selman, Dong Soon Kim, Elissa Murphy, Laura Tucker, Annie Pardo, Jung Su Lee, Wonjun Ji, Marvin I Schwarz, Ivana V Yang, David A Schwartz, and Tasha E Fingerlin.
    • Department of Medicine. Electronic address: anna.peljto@ucdenver.edu.
    • Chest. 2015 Feb 1; 147 (2): 460464460-464.

    BackgroundPolymorphisms in the MUC5B promoter, TOLLIP, and nine additional genetic loci have been associated with idiopathic pulmonary fibrosis (IPF) within non-Hispanic white populations. It is unknown whether these variants account for risk of IPF in other racial/ethnic populations. We conducted a candidate single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) association study in cohorts of Mexican and Korean patients with IPF.MethodsWe chose 12 SNPs from 11 loci that are associated with IPF among non-Hispanic whites and genotyped these SNPs in cohorts of Mexican (83 patients, 111 control subjects) and Korean (239 patients, 87 control subjects) people. Each SNP was tested for association with IPF, after adjusting for age and sex.ResultsThe MUC5B promoter SNP rs35705950 was associated with IPF in the Mexican (OR = 7.36, P = .0001), but not the Korean (P = .99) cohort. The SNP in IVD (chromosome15, rs2034650) was significantly associated with pulmonary fibrosis in both the Mexican (OR = 0.40, P = .01) and Korean (OR = 0.13, P = .0008) cohorts. In the Korean cohort, there were no other variants associated with disease. In the Mexican cohort, SNPs on chromosomes 3, 4, and 11 were also associated with disease.ConclusionsThe strongest identified genetic risk factor for IPF among the non-Hispanic white population, the MUC5B promoter polymorphism, is also a strong risk factor in a Mexican population, but is very rare in a Korean population. The majority of genetic variants that account for risk of IPF in groups other than non-Hispanic whites are unknown. Hispanic and Asian populations should be studied separately to identify genetic risk loci for IPF.

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