Polymorphisms of IL28B gene are highly associated with sustained virological response (SVR) in patients with chronic hepatitis C treated with peginterferon and ribavirin. Quantitation of Interferon-γ Inducible Protein-10 (IP-10) may also differentiate antiviral response. We evaluated IP-10 levels in pretreatment serum from 115 non-responders and 157 sustained responders in the VIRAHEP-C cohort, including African Americans (AA) and Caucasian Americans (CA). Mean IP-10 was lower in sustained responders compared to non-responders (460 ± 37 pg/ml vs 697 ± 49 pg/ml, p<0.001), both in AA and CA. The positive predictive value of low IP-10 levels (<600 pg/ml) for SVR was 69% while the negative predictive value of high IP-10 levels (>600 pg/ml) was 67%. We assessed the combination of pretreatment IP-10 levels with IL28B genotype as predictors of treatment response. The IL28B polymorphism rs12979860 was tested in 210 participants. CC, CT, or TT genotypes were found in 30%, 49%, and 21%, respectively, with corresponding SVR rates of 87%, 50%, and 39% (p<0.0001). Serum IP-10 levels within the IL28B genotype groups provided additional information regarding the likelihood of SVR (p< 0.0001). CT carriers with low IP-10 had 64% SVR versus 24% with high IP-10. Similarly, a higher SVR rate was identified for TT and CC carriers with low versus high IP-10 (TT: 48% versus 20%, CC: 89% versus 79%). IL28B genotype and baseline IP-10 levels were additive but independent when predicting SVR in both AA and CA.
Conclusions
When IL28B genotype is combined with pretreatment serum IP-10 measurement, the predictive value for discrimination between SVR and non-response is significantly improved, especially in non-CC genotypes. This relationship warrants further investigation to elucidate mechanisms of antiviral response and prospective validation.
NF-Y is a sequence-specific DNA-binding protein that interacts with the conserved Y motif of the major histocompatibility complex class II gene, E alpha. Since it is actually a CCAAT box-binding protein, NF-Y also attaches to other promoters bearing CCAAT sequences; yet, it is neither of the previously described transcription factors, CBP or CTF/NF-1. In this report, we document the cell-type distribution and various biochemical properties of NF-Y. The most important findings are that this protein is ubiquitously distributed, that it is probably a metallo-protein, that it has a protease-resistant DNA-binding domain and that the NF-Y/E alpha-olgo complex seems extremely large (greater than 200kD). These data should prove useful in comparisons of NF-Y with other sequence-specific DNA-binding proteins; they have already provided new insights into NF-Y's structure.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.