Ulcerative colitis (UC), a common form of inflammatory bowel disease, is a multifactorial disorder with significant genetic influence. Recently, evidence of linkage on chromosome 7q near the intestinal mucin gene MUC3 was reported by an affected sib-pair analysis. Previous reports indicate a possible mucin abnormality in UC patients, but whether genetic differences in a specific mucin gene are associated with UC is unknown. Here we analysed polymorphisms of variable number of tandem repeats (VNTRs) within this gene using DNAs obtained from 243 Japanese (75 patients with UC and 168 controls), and to confirm the result we undertook a two-stage examination using 328 Caucasian samples (72 and 85 with UC in the first and second stages, respectively, and 171 controls). When the frequency of patients carrying one or two rare VNTR alleles was compared with that of controls, a significant increase was found first in Japanese patients (odds ratio 2.72, 95% CI 1.17-6.32, P = 0. 0308). In Caucasians, the odds ratio was 2.80 (95% CI 1.36-5.75, P = 0.0079) in the first stage, 2.43 (95% CI 1.20-4.92, P = 0.0196) in the second stage and 2.60 (95% CI 1.41-4.80, P = 0.0024) in total. The overall odds ratio was 2.64 (95% CI 1.60-4.33, P = 0.0001). This result suggests that rare alleles of the MUC3 gene may confer genetic predisposition to UC.
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Ulcerative colitis (UC) and Crohn's disease (CD), the major forms of inflammatory bowel diseases (IBDs), are multifactorial disorders of unknown etiology. We reported a possible association of rare variable number of tandem repeat (VNTR) alleles of the "MUC3" gene with a susceptibility to UC. However, an entire structure of "MUC3" is still unknown because the long stretches of tandem repeats in this "gene" make its cloning extraordinarily difficult. In this study, we report evidence that "MUC3" consists of two genes, MUC3A and MUC3B, both of which encode membrane-bound mucins with two epidermal growth factor-like motifs, and we describe the complete 3Ј-terminal structures of these two genes. We have also analyzed the single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the exonic sequences of the 3Ј portions of these two genes to investigate whether sequence variations in these regions can cause person-to-person differences in the susceptibility to IBDs, and report here that non-synonymous SNPs of MUC3A, involving a tyrosine residue with a proposed role in cell signaling, may confer genetic predisposition to CD (P ϭ 0.0132). Our findings suggest that variants of MUC3A may be involved in the occurrence of UC and CD in distinct manners.
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