• Title of article

    Association of IL-10 Gene Polymorphisms and Human T Lymphotropic Virus Type I-Associated Myelopathy/tropical Spastic Paraparesis in North-East of Iran (Mashhad)

  • Author/Authors

    Shirdel, Abbas Department of Hematology - School of Medicine - Mashhad University of Medical Sciences , Azarpazhooh, Mahmoud Reza Neurology Department - School of Medicine - Mashhad University of Medical Sciences , Sahebari, Maryam Rheumatic Diseases Research Centre - School of Medicine - Mashhad University of Medical Sciences , Ghanbari, Mohsen Immunology Research Centre - School of Medicine - Mashhad University of Medical Sciences , Mirfeizi, Zahra Rheumatic Diseases Research Centre - School of Medicine - Mashhad University of Medical Sciences , Hutchinson, Ian Immunology Research Group - Faculty of Life Sciences - The University of Manchester - United Kingdom , Ziaee, Aghigh Immunology Research Centre - School of Medicine - Mashhad University of Medical Sciences , Rafatpanah, Houshang Inflammation and Inflammatory Disease Research Centre - School of Medicine - Mashhad University of Medical Sciences

  • Pages
    6
  • From page
    258
  • To page
    263
  • Abstract
    The underlying mechanisms leading to the development of human T-cell lymphotropic virus type I (HTLV-I) associated myelopathy/tropical spastic paraparesis (HAM/TSP) in HTLV-I infected individuals are not fully understood. Host genetic factors appear to be involved as risk factors for developing HAM/TSP. We investigated the possible contribution of interleukin-10 (IL-10) as a risk factor to HAM/TSP by comparing frequencies of promoter region single nucleotide polymorphisms in HTLV-I infected Iranian patients who either remained asymptomatic or developed HAM/TSP and asymptomatic HTLV-I carriers. Healthy, uninfected individuals from the same region served as healthy controls. Significant differences were observed in the distribution of IL-10 promoter alleles and genotypes at position -819 and -592 between HAM/TSP patients and healthy controls (P=0.01), and between HTLV-I carriers and healthy controls (P=0.02). The frequency of the low IL-10 producer haplotype (-1082*A, -819*T, -592*A) was significantly associated with HTLV-I carriage or HAM/TSP compared with healthy controls (P=0.02 and 0.01, respectively). Our results suggest that IL-10 -819*T and -592*A alleles are significant risk factors for developing HTLLV-I infection but do not appear to convey additional risk for developing HAM/TSP.
  • Keywords
    Gene , HAM/TSP , HTLV-I , IL-10 , Polymorphisms
  • Journal title
    Astroparticle Physics
  • Serial Year
    2013
  • Record number

    2423403