(Stroke. 2004;35:2438.)
© 2004 American Heart Association, Inc.
Original Contributions |
From the Department of Clinical Neurosciences (P.J.-D., P.R., H.S.M.), St. Georges Hospital Medical School, London, UK; and the Department of Neurology (M.S., A.B., S.v.K.), Johann Wolfgang Goethe-University, Frankfurt am Main, Germany.
Correspondence to Dr Paula Jerrard-Dunne, Clinical Neurosciences Department, St. Georges Hospital Medical School, Cranmer Terrace, London SW170RE. E-mail pjerrard{at}sghms.ac.uk
Background and Purpose Smoking acts as a pro-inflammatory stimulus. Inflammation may provide a key mechanism by which smoking causes atherosclerosis. If so, then the degree to which an individual mounts an inflammatory response is likely to influence atherosclerosis severity. This study examined the impact of inflammatory gene polymorphisms and genesmoking interactions on common carotid artery intima-media thickness (IMT), a measure of early atherosclerosis.
Methods In a community population (n=1000), mean IMT was determined using ultrasound. This population was genotyped for 6 polymorphisms in 4 inflammatory genes: IL-6-174, IL-6-572, and IL-6-597; IL-1-ß-31; IL-1 receptor antagonist VNTR and CD14-159. Serum IL-6 levels were measured in the first 500 subjects. Genotypes/haplotypes associated with higher IL-6 levels were designated "inflammatory haplotypes." A gene load score was calculated, in which 2 represented individuals homozygous for
2 inflammatory genotypes/haplotypes and 0 was homozygous for none.
Results Increasing gene load of inflammatory genotypes was associated with a linear increase in serum IL-6 levels (P=0.018) and increased carotid artery IMT (P=0.003). There was a significant interaction between gene load and smoking status on carotid IMT (P for interaction=0.002). Specifically, in smokers, carriers of inflammatory haplotypes had significantly increased age- and sex-adjusted IMT (IL-6-174C/IL-6-572G/IL-6-597A, P=0.005; IL-1-ß-31T/IL-1RN*2,P=0.04; CD14-159CC, P=0.028).
Conclusions These findings support the hypothesis that inflammation and cytokine responses provide a key mechanism by which smoking causes atherogenesis. Secondly, they highlight the importance of geneenvironment, and genegeneenvironment interactions in the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis.
Key Words: arteriosclerosis cigarette smoking genetics gene expression inflammation
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