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Single-nucleotide polymorphisms of toll-like receptor 9 gene and its associated risk in ulcerative colitis Running title: TLR9 SNPs in Chinese UC patients Disclosure The authors have no conflict of interests, and the work was not supported or funded by any drug company. 1 Abstract Background with Objective: Ulcerative colitis patients have a high risk to develop colorectal cancer. Toll-like receptor 9 (TLR9) plays a key role in the innate immune system in gastroenterological tract and TLR9 polymorphisms could contribute to development of ulcerative colitis. We carried out this study to determine whether single nucleotide polymorphisms covering TLR9 gene is associated with Ulcerative colitis in Chinese Han population. Methods: Genomic DNA from the peripheral blood of 110 patients with ulcerative colitis and 112 healthy controls were analyzed for TLR9 rs187084 and rs352140 polymorphisms using PCR-RFLP for risk of ulcerative colitis. All subjects were recruited from the outpatient department of digestology of the second hospital of Harbin medical University between January 2010 and January 2012. Results: There was no evidence showing an association between TLR9 gene rs187084 and rs352140 polymorphisms and ulcerative colitis risk or disease progression. Conclusion: In this study of Chinese Han patients with ulcerative colitis, there is no association between TLR9 rs187084 and rs352140 polymorphisms and risk of ulcerative colitis. Keywords: Toll-like receptor 9, Single nucleotide polymorphism, Ulcerative colitis, Innate immunity 2 Introduction Ulcerative colitis patients have a high risk to develop colorectal cancer. Approximately 16% of such patients will develop either a cancer precursor or colon cancer over 30 years 1. Clinically, ulcerative colitis is considered as an autoimmune disease and treated by anti-inflammatory or immunosuppression drugs 2. Pathologically, ulcerative colitis is a disease with multiple genes involved in the immune system. To date, a number of studies have been reported on the association of different gene polymorphisms with development of ulcerative colitis 3. Toll-like receptors (TLRs) are a family of evolutionarily conserved proteins and play a key role in the innate immune system by directly recognizing pathogen-derived elements, including viral and bacterial DNA, lipopolysaccharides, and proteoglycans. The TLR ability to recognize microbial components and to trigger activation of innate immunity and/or adaptive immunity in human body makes them excellent candidate genes to be investigated for its association with various autoimmune diseases, including ulcerative colitis. TLR9 polymorphisms were shown to associate with susceptibility to many diseases, including immunodeficiency disorders, Crohn’s disease, and inflammatory disorders 4. TLR9 was expressed in colorectal cancer and TLR9 agonist leads to decreased cell survival and induced apoptosis of colon cancer cells 5. Therefore, our study investigates the association of single nucleotide polymorphisms of TLR9 gene with ulcerative colitis in Chinese Han patients. 3 Method Study population After informed consent, patients with unrelated ulcerative colitis (n = 110) were recruited from Gastroenterology Department in The Second Hospital of Harbin Medical University, China. Healthy and ethnically matched blood donors (n = 112) were recruited from the Harbin regions as the controls. All patients were diagnosed as ulcerative colitis based on clinical, endoscopical, radiological, and histopathological criteria guided by the cooperated IBD group of Chinese Medical Association Digestive Branch in 2007. All control subjects were matched with healthy Chinese Han citizens who visited our hospital between January 2010 and January 2012. 5ml of blood was collected from the individuals in vacuum EDTA tubes and stored at -20°C. This study was approved by the Ethical Review Committee of Research in Harbin Medical University. Genotyping Genomic DNA was extracted from EDTA-preserved peripheral blood samples by using a blood genomic DNA extraction kit (Tiangen, Beijing, China) according to the manufacturer’s instructions and then stored at -20°C until further use. A polymerase chain reaction–restriction fragment length polymorphism (PCR–RFLP) method was utilized to detect of TLR9 gene SNPs using markers of rs187084 and rs352140 according to a previous study 6. After PCR, the products were digested with restriction enzymes AflII or BstUI and then run on 1.5% agarose gels and visualized and photographed under UV illumination. The different TLR9 genotypes were 4 determined by the number of bands after the digestion of PCR products. Statistical analysis To compare the distributions of genotypic frequency between the cases and controls, x2 test and Fisher’s exact test was performed using SPSS16.0. (SPSS, Chicago, IL, USA). The Hardy–Weinberg equilibrium was performed for cases and controls. The odds ratios with 95% confidence interval (CI) were then calculated. Statistical significance was defined as p<0.05. Results The genotypes of these case and control subjects were in Hardy–Weinberg equilibrium. However, there was no statistically significant deviation of these two TLR9 gene polymorphisms between the cases and controls. The clinicopathological characteristics of the patients are shown in Table 1. The data showed that both the case and control groups were well balanced in terms of age and sex distribution. Male to female ratio was 1.3:1 and 1.8:1. Genotype and distribution of allele frequencies in ulcerative colitis patients and healthy controls are shown in Tables 2, The dominating disease extension of Ulcerative colitis was proctitis (36.36%),and the disease scale division was midrange (53.64%), and none of these two TLR9 SNPs showed any statistically significant association with ulcerative colitis risk (p>0.05). No significant differences were 5 observed between ulcerative colitis patients and healthy controls in frequencies of the carriership of the alleles rs187084 (x2= 0.625, p = 0.433) and rs352140 (x2= 2.367, p = 0.124). Furthermore, there were no statistically significant differences between the clinicopathological parameters from the patients and TLR9 gene polymorphisms (p>0.05). Discussion In the present study, we aimed to investigate the association between Ulcerative colitis and SNP polymorphisms in TLR9 in Chinese Han population. Our current data showed that there is no association between Chinese Han patients with ulcerative colitis and TLR9 polymorphisms, which contradicted the data from a Japanese study, in which TLR9 gene polymorphisms were associated with severity of ulcerative colitis in Japanese patients, and in their study TLR9-1486CC, 1174GG and 2848AA increased the risk of UC and TLR9 -1486TT, 1174AA and 2848GG decreased the risk of UC, although there were no correlations between SNPs and disease phenotype or TLR9 mRNA expression. Toll-like receptors (TLRs) are evolutionarily conserved components of the innate immune system that act to directly recognize pathogen-derived elements, including viral and bacterial DNA, lipopolysaccharides, and proteoglycans. They provide a crucial link between the recognition of pathogens by the innate immune system and subsequent activation of adaptive immunity, inducing maturation of antigen presenting cells and differentiation of T cells. So they play a central role in innate immunity. TLR9 (chromosome 3p21.3, GenBank accession number NM_017442) is a member of the family that recognizes bacterial unmethylated CpG-DNA motifs. 6 Previously, TLR9 polymorphisms were associated with various autoimmune or infectious diseases, including Crohn’s disease. TLR9 is able to recognize unmethylated CpG oligodeoxynucleotide DNA of bacteria and DNA viruses. The immunostimulatory effects of CpG-DNA can initiate and/or modulate autoimmunity by inducing the inflammatory cells and production of cytokines, such as interleukin 6 (IL-6), IL-8, IL-12, and TNF, some of which may be associated with development of ulcerative colitis and colorectal cancer or for their therapy 7, 8 ; TLR9-induced signaling pathway may play an important role in development of stomach, lung, and bowel cancers. Ulcerative colitis is a heterogeneous polygenic disease and the associated studies reveal the susceptibility genes may depend on the patients’ ethnic background. So we carried out this study to determine whether single nucleotide polymorphisms covering the TLR9 are associated with Ulcerative colitis in Chinese Han population, in order to increase understanding of how TLR9 gene polymorphisms affect development or progression of Ulcerative colitis. Our results indicate that none of the two TLR9 SNPs showed a statistically significant association with Ulcerative colitis risk in our cohort. So TLR9 may be unable to explain how innate immune system is involved in chronic inflammatory condition including Ulcerative colitis. As Ulcerative colitis is a heterogeneous polygenic disease, association studies are expected to reveal various sets of susceptibility genes depending on the ethnic background of the study populations. In conclusion, we found no association between TLR9 polymorphisms and risk of ulcerative colitis in Han Chinese patients. Further studies in different ethnic population may resolve the role of TLRs polymorphisms in ulcerative colitis susceptibility. 7 Acknowledgment This work was supported by the Nature Science Foundation of Heilongjiang Province (D201178) and the research projects of Heilongjiang Provincial Health Department (2011-094). References 1. Triantafillidis JK, Nasioulas G, Kosmidis PA. Colorectal cancer and inflammatory bowel disease: epidemiology, risk factors, mechanisms of carcinogenesis and prevention strategies. Anticancer Res 2009;29:2727-2737. 2. Danese S, Fiocchi C. Ulcerative colitis. N Engl J Med 2011;365:1713-1725. 3. Rodriguez-Bores L, Fonseca GC, Villeda MA, Yamamoto-Furusho JK. Novel genetic markers in inflammatory bowel disease. World J Gastroenterol 2007;13:5560-5570. 4. Cook DN, Pisetsky DS, Schwartz DA. Toll-like receptors in the pathogenesis of human disease. Nat Immunol 2004;5:975-979. 5. Rayburn ER, Wang W, Zhang R, Wang H. Experimental therapy for colon cancer: anti-cancer effects of TLR9 agonism, combination with other therapeutic modalities, and dependence upon p53. Int J Oncol 2007;30:1511-1519. 6. Zakeri S, Pirahmadi S, Mehrizi AA, Djadid ND. Genetic variation of TLR-4, TLR-9 and TIRAP genes in Iranian malaria patients. Malar J 2011;10:77. 7. Kauppila JH, Karttunen TJ, Saarnio J, Nyberg P, Salo T, Graves DE, et al. Short DNA sequences and bacterial DNA induce esophageal, gastric, and colorectal cancer cell invasion. APMIS 2012. 8. Triozzi PL, Aldrich W, Ponnazhagan S. Inhibition and promotion of tumor growth with adeno-associated virus carcinoembryonic antigen vaccine and Toll-like receptor agonists. Cancer Gene Ther 2011;18:850-858. 8 Table 1. TLR-9 rs187084 and rs352140 genotype distributions in cases and controls Gene (LR9) UC patients Controls (n = 110) (n = 112) TT 34 (30.9%) 36 (32%) TC 58 (52.7%) 48 (42.9%) CC 18 (16.4) 28 (25%) T 126 (57.3%) 120 (53.6%) C 94 (42.7%) 104 (46.4%) AA 25 (22.7%) 33 (29.5%) AG 44 (40%) 46 (41.1%) GG 41 (37.3%) 33 (29.5%) A 94 (42.7%) 112 (50%) G 126 (57.3%) 112 (50%) X2 p value (<0.05) rs187084 3.157 0.206 0.615 0.433 1.995 0.369 2.361 0.124 Alleles rs352140 Alleles P values < 0.05 are bolded. 9 Table 2. Demographic and clinicopathological features of UC patients (Mean ± SD) Demographic features UC patients (n=110) Age in years (Min–Max) 38.64 ± 14.5 (16–65) Sex (Female/Male) 48/62 Age of diagnosis (Years) ≤40 years 76 (69.09%) >40 years 34 (30.91%) Disease location Proctitis 40 (36.36%) Left colitis 38 (34.55%) Right colitis 3 (2.73%) Pancolitis 29 (26.36%) Disease severity Light 38 (34.55%) Mild 59 (53.64%) Severe 13 (11.82%) Disease type Initial 10 (9.1) Chronic continuation 9 (8.2) Chronic recidivation 91 (82.7) 10