Metabolic Syndrome in Postmenopause: eNOS, p22 phox, CETP and ESR1 Gene Polymorphisms Related to Endocrine-Metabolic Changes | Chapter 09 | New Insights into Disease and Pathogen Research Vol. 1

--

Aims: To investigate the endocrine-metabolic changes in postmenopausal women with MetS and examine relationship with the polymorphisms of eNOS-G894T, p22(phox)-930 A/G, CETP TaqIB, ESR1 (PvuII and XbaI) genes.

Methods: 280 postmenopausal apparently healthy women aged between 60 and 80 years were classified into non-MetS (212) and MetS (68). Clinical, anthropometric and endocrine-metabolic parameters were measured. The single nucleotide polymorphisms were determined and tested for interacting with these parameters.

Results: The weight, waist circumference, blood pressure, WBC, triglycerides, LDL-C, TG/HDL-C ratio, apolipoprotein (apo)B, apoB/apoA-I ratio, fasting glucose, insulin, HOMA, uric acid, were higher and HDL-C was lower in MetS group thus fulfilled the criteria for the MetS. The significant higher levels of E2, T3, GHBP, PTH and lower levels of cortisol, SHBG, FSH, LH, IGFBP1, cortisol/DHEA ratio were also detected.

Genetic association studies showed that presence of A allele p22phoxA/G (OR=1.62; CI=1.08–2.42) and heterozygote AG-XbaI(ESR1) (OR=2.29; CI= 1.19–4.37) indicated a significant risk for MetS. The binary logistic regression (MetS vs Controls) showed an interaction of G894TeNOS polymorphism with MetS (OR>2.5; 95% CI =1.47–4.90) that associated with SBP, TG, apoB, uric acid, ASTGOT (OR>1) and HDL-C (OR<1). CETP TaqIB polymorphism associated with MetS (OR<1) in presence of SBP, GLU, TG with OR>1. ESR1 PvuII (T/C) associated with MetS (OR between 1.59–8.60) in presence of LDL-C, TG/HDL-C ratio, P with OD>1 and HDL-C, androstenedione, SHBG, FAI with OR<1.

In MetS group the carriers of -TT (eNOS-G894T) genotype had higher levels of blood pressure, glucose; -GG (p22phox A/G) had higher levels of BMI, apoB/apoA ratio; -B1B2 (CETP B1/B2) had higher levels of SBP, glucose, cholesterol, HDL-C, CRP, GHBP and lower levels of TSH; -CC (PvuII) and GG (XbaI) ESR1 genotypes showed higher levels of glucose.

Conclusions: These results sustain an interaction between the studied polymorphisms and the endocrine-metabolic changes in MetS pathogenesis. Our results sustain an interaction between the studied polymorphisms and their phenotypes in conferring a higher susceptibility to the endocrine-metabolic changes involved in pathogenesis of MetS. The elevated values of TG/HDL-C and apoB/apoA ratios could be risk indicators for calculation cardiovascular risk in of MetS.

Author(s) Details

Olga Ianas
“C.I. Parhon” National Institute of Endocrinology, Bd. Aviatorilor 34–38, S1, 011863, Bucharest, Romania.

Dana Manda
“C.I. Parhon” National Institute of Endocrinology, Bd. Aviatorilor 34–38, S1, 011863, Bucharest, Romania.

Sabina Oros
“C.I. Parhon” National Institute of Endocrinology, Bd. Aviatorilor 34–38, S1, 011863, Bucharest, Romania.
“Carol Davila” University of Medicine and Farmacy, Str. Dionisie Lupu 37, S2, 020021, Bucharest, Romania.

Oana Popa
“C.I. Parhon” National Institute of Endocrinology, Bd. Aviatorilor 34–38, S1, 011863, Bucharest, Romania.

Anca Sima
“Nicolae Simionescu” Institute of Cellular Biology and Pathology, Str. B.P. Hasdeu 8, S5, 050568, Bucharest, Romania.

Read full article: http://bp.bookpi.org/index.php/bpi/catalog/view/53/533/462-1
View Volume: https://doi.org/10.9734/bpi/nidpr/v1

--

--

New Insights into Disease and Pathogen Research
0 Followers

This book covers all areas of disease and pathogen. The contributions by the authors include beta cell dysfunction, insulin resistance, hyperinsulinemia