Author/Authors :
Alavi-Shahri، نويسنده , , Jamshid and Behravan، نويسنده , , Javad and Hassany، نويسنده , , Mitra and Tatari، نويسنده , , Farnoosh and Kasaian، نويسنده , , Jamal and Ganjali، نويسنده , , Rashin and Tavallaie، نويسنده , , Shima and Sabouri، نويسنده , , Somayeh and Sahebkar، نويسنده , , Amirhossein and Oladi، نويسنده , , Mohammadreza and Mirhosseini، نويسنده , , Naghmeh and Shakeri، نويسنده , , Moha، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Background and Aims
erall prevalence of obesity and metabolic syndrome (MetS) is increasing among children and adolescents and can predispose to type II diabetes mellitus and cardiovascular disease. There are reported associations between an angiotensin II type I receptor gene polymorphism (AT1R/A1166C) with hypertension, myocardial infarction, insulin resistance and cardiovascular disease risk. In the present study, we aimed to investigate whether the AT1R/A1166C polymorphism was associated with MetS among adolescent Iranian girls.
s
l of 350 adolescent girls aged 15–17 years from high schools and different educational zones of Mashhad city participated in this population-based, genetic association study. Of these individuals, 101 patients had MetS (defined by the NCEP-ATP III criteria); the remaining 249 age-matched girls were considered as the control group. All subjects were genotyped for the AT1R/A1166C polymorphism using the polymerase chain reaction-restriction fragment length polymorphism (PCR-RFLP) technique.
s
ncies of the AA, AC and CC genotypes were 164 (65.9%), 80 (32.1%) and 5 (2.0%) in the control group and 79 (78.2%), 20 (19.8%) and 2 (2.0%) in patients, which were not consistent with the Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium (p <0.05 and p <0.001, respectively). Frequency of the AT1R C allele was found to be significantly lower in patients compared with controls (p <0.05).
sions
ndings suggested that the 1166C allele of AT1R gene may be associated with a decreased risk of MetS in adolescent Iranian females.