Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: EC:4.2.1.22 (cystathionine beta-synthase)
965 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The frequency of the heterozygous 844ins68 mutation of the cystathionine beta-synthase (CBS) gene and of its association with the homozygous C677T transition of the methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHFR) gene, plasma fasting tHcy, folate and vitamin B12 levels were evaluated in 309 consecutive patients with objectively diagnosed early-onset venous (n = 200) or arterial thromboembolic disease (n = 109) recruited over 25 months in Milan (North Italy) and Naples (South Italy). The above gene polymorphisms were also evaluated in a population of 787 unmatched controls, 204 of whom--similar to patients for age- and sex-distribution--had fasting tHcy, vitamins and activated protein C resistance measured in their plasma. Moderate fasting hyperhomocysteinemia was detected in 15.5% of patients and in 5.9% of 204 controls (Mantel-Haenszel OR after stratification for type of occlusive disease and gender: 2.88; 1.48-5.32). The frequencies of the 677TT mutation of the MTHFR gene and of the heterozygous 844ins68 insertion of the CBS gene were not significantly different in the patient (19.4% and 6.9%) and the control population (16.5% and 7.8%), but the association of the two gene polymorphisms found in 3.9% of patients and in 1.1% of controls - was significantly associated with an increased risk of venous or arterial occlusive diseases (RR = 3.63; 1.48-8.91). The MTHFR 677TT mutation (RR: 6.92; 3.86-12.4) and its association with the 844ins68 insertion (RR: 21.9; 8.35-57.4), but not the isolated insertion (RR: 0.71), were more frequent in patients and controls with fasting hyperhomocysteinemia than in normohomocysteinemic subjects, irrespective of the type of occlusive disease (venous or arterial). When adjusted for determinants of hyperhomocysteinemia in the patient and the control populations (generalized linear model), fasting tHcy levels were significantly higher in subjects with association of the two gene abnormalities (24.2+/-3.8 micromol/L) than in subjects with the MTHFR 677TT mutation only (14.0+/-5.8 micromol/L, p = 0.004). Activated protein C resistance was significantly more prevalent in venous patients (9.9%) than in controls (3.9%, OR = 2.69; 1.08-6.88). Six of 21 venous patients with APC-resistance also had hyperhomocysteinemia (RR = 5.04; 0.68-37.6), but isolated fasting hyperhomocysteinemia retained statistical significance for the association with venous occlusive disease (RR = 2.84; 1.34-6.01). Heterozygosity for the 844ins68 mutation of the CBS gene is not per se a risk factor for premature arterial and/or venous occlusive diseases. However, when detected in combination with thermolabile MTHFR, it increases by almost 4-fold the risk of occlusive diseases (arterial and/or venous), by increasing the risk and the degree of fasting hyperhomocysteinemia.
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PMID:Contribution of the cystathionine beta-synthase gene (844ins68) polymorphism to the risk of early-onset venous and arterial occlusive disease and of fasting hyperhomocysteinemia. 1105 53

Aberrant DNA methylation is recognized as being a common feature of human neoplasia.CpG island hypermethylation and global genomic hypomethylation occur simultaneously in the cancer cell. However, very little is known about the interindividual inherited susceptibility to these epigenetic processes. To address this matter, we have genotyped in 233 cancer patients (with colorectal, breast, or lung tumors), four germ-line variants in three key genes involved in the metabolism of the methyl group, methylene-tetrahydrofolate reductase, methionine synthase, and cystathionine beta-synthase, and analyzed their association with DNA methylation parameters. The epigenetic features analyzed were the 5-methylcytosine content in the genome of the tumors and their normal counterparts, and the presence of CpG island hypermethylation of tumor suppressor genes (p16(INK4a), p14(ARF), hMLH1, MGMT, APC, LKB1, DAPK, GSTP1, BRCA1, RAR beta 2, CDH1, and RASSF1). Two positive associations were found. First, carriers of genotypes containing the methylene-tetrahydrofolate reductase 677T allele show constitutive low levels of 5-methylcytosine in their genomes (P = 0.002), and tumors in these patients do not achieve severe degrees of global hypomethylation (P = 0.047). Second, tumors occurring in homozygous carriers of the methionine synthase 2756G allele show a lower number of hypermethylated CpG islands of tumor suppressor genes (P = 0.029). The existence of these associations may provide another example of the interplay between genetic and epigenetic factors in the cancer cell.
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PMID:Germ-line variants in methyl-group metabolism genes and susceptibility to DNA methylation in normal tissues and human primary tumors. 1215 64