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1 Viral Epidemiology Branch, Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics, National Cancer Institute, NIH/Department of Health and Human Services, Bethesda, Maryland; 2 Gambia Hepatitis Intervention Study, IARC and 3 Medical Research Council Laboratories, Banjul, The Gambia; 4 Molecular Epidemiology Unit, Academic Unit of Epidemiology and Health Services Research, University of Leeds, Leeds, United Kingdom; 5 Infectious Disease Epidemiology Unit, London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, London, United Kingdom; and 6 IARC, Lyon, France
Requests for reprints: Gregory D. Kirk, Viral Epidemiology Branch, Division of Cancer Epidemiology and Genetics, National Cancer Institute, 6120 Executive Boulevard, EPS/8003, MSC-7248, Bethesda, MD 20892. Phone: 301-496-8115; Fax: 301-402-0817. E-mail: kirkg{at}mail.nih.gov
| Abstract |
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| Introduction |
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Genes related to aflatoxin metabolism are consequently a primary research interest. Aflatoxin B1 (AFB1), the major aflatoxin that contaminates food, such as groundnuts and maize, is metabolized in the liver by cytochrome P450 enzymes to a reactive AFB1-8,9-exo-epoxide that can bind to DNA to form the pro-mutagenic AFB1-N7-guanine adduct (10). Glutathione S-transferasemediated conjugation of the reactive 8,9-epoxide to reduced glutathione can protect cellular DNA by preventing adduct formation (11, 12). Genetic polymorphisms in these enzymes may alter the mutagenic and carcinogenic effects of a given level of aflatoxin exposure. GSTM1 and to a lesser extent GSTT1 (11, 12) have been implicated in AFB1-8,9-epoxide conjugation and both exhibit a deletion polymorphism resulting in the absence of protein in individuals homozygous for the deletion. In the majority of studies, this null genotype in either GSTM1 or GSTT1 was not associated with increased HCC risk or was limited to an effect among subgroups estimated to have the heaviest aflatoxin exposure (13-15). In Taiwan, investigators reported an increased HCC risk associated with aflatoxin biomarkers, limited to individuals with the GSTM1 or GSTT1 null genotype (16, 17).
In addition to the glutathione S-transferase enzymes, microsomal epoxide hydrolase (HYL1) may be involved in the hydrolysis of the AFB1-8,9-epoxide to AFB1-8,9-dihydrodiol, although the experimental evidence has been contradictory (11, 18, 19). The HYL1*2 allele polymorphism in exon 3 involves substitution of histidine (His) for tyrosine (Tyr) at amino acid position 113 and is associated with a 40% decrease of in vitro enzyme activity; this effect seems to be related to protein stability (20). The lower activity His variant for HYL1*2 was associated with an increased risk of HCC in an earlier study in China (21) and one in Italy (22) but not in studies in Sudan (13) and a more recent Chinese study (23).
Once the AFB1-N7-guanine adduct is formed, it may be removed from DNA, either spontaneously or enzymatically, although relatively little is understood concerning the enzymes that repair this adduct. In the case of the X-ray cross-complementing group 1 protein (XRCC1), involved in repair of single-strand DNA breaks, a significant increase in AFB1-DNA adducts in Taiwanese subjects was associated with the XRCC1-399 glycine (XRCC1-399G) polymorphism (24).
The main aim of the current study was to evaluate factors related to individual susceptibility to HCC in an area with a high prevalence of HCC risk factors. Specifically, individual genetic differences in aflatoxin metabolism and DNA repair enzymes were investigated in HCC cases and healthy control participants well-characterized for HBV, hepatitis C virus (HCV), and 249ser TP53 status, a mutation associated with aflatoxin exposure (3, 10).
| Materials and Methods |
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-fetoprotein level >100 ng/mL (n = 162, 75.0%). Controls without clinical evidence of liver disease (n = 408) were recruited from the outpatient clinics of the same hospitals, frequency matched by sex and age (within 10 year groupings), and had normal
-fetoprotein levels. Subject evaluation included a structured interview that assessed sociodemographic, lifestyle, and dietary factors; collection of blood and urine samples; and a standardized clinical examination. Institutional review boards from IARC, National Cancer Institute, and Medical Research Council/Gambia Government Joint Ethical Review committees approved the study protocol. Informed consent was obtained from each participant before inclusion in the study.
Laboratory Testing
Blood specimens were processed immediately after collection and stored at 70°C until subsequent testing. Genotyping analysis was done on genomic DNA isolated from lymphocytes using a phenol-chloroform method. An aliquot of this DNA was then shipped to the University of Leeds for genotyping. GSTM1 and GSTT1 genotyping was done in a multiplex PCR as previously described with categorization of individuals as having the null genotype (homozygous deletion) or at least one intact allele (27, 28). The ß-globin gene was amplified as a positive control. The HYL1*2 (His113Tyr) (20) and the XRCC1 (Arg399Gln) codon (24) polymorphisms were examined by PCR with restriction enzyme digestion as previously reported.
-fetoprotein was quantified by standard radiometric assay methods (DiaSorin SA, Sallugia, Italy). HBV surface antigenemia (HBsAg) was determined by reverse passive hemagglutination assay (Murex Diagnostics Limited, Dartford, United Kingdom) with RIA testing of negative samples (Sorin Biomedica Diagnostics, Vercelli, Italy). Anti-HCV status was determined by third generation ELISA (ORTHO, Neckargemund, Germany) with recombinant immunoblot assay confirmation of reactive samples (CHIRON, Emeryville, CA). TP53 249ser mutations were detected in circulating cell-free DNA in plasma using methods previously described (25). Briefly, non-cell-associated DNA was extracted and purified from 200 µL of plasma using standard extraction kits. TP53 249ser mutation was then detected by PCR amplification and restriction analysis and confirmed by direct sequencing of exon-7 PCR products.
Statistical Analysis
Genotype data were analyzed as dichotomous variables (at least one intact allele present versus null) for both GSTM1 and GSTT1. The HYL1*2 allele polymorphism (Tyr113His) was considered as heterozygote (YH) or homozygote (HH) for the low activity variant His allele. The XRCC1 polymorphism at exon 10 codon 399 involves a glycine (G) substitution for arginine (A) with a possible reduction in DNA repair with the glycine allele associated with the heterozygote (AG) or homozygote (GG) genotype (24). The primary analysis involved each genotype (HYL1*2, XRCC1) evaluated as a categorical variable with three levels (homozygous low activity, heterozygous, and homozygous high activity). Additional analyses examined combinations of the heterozygous genotypes with the homozygous variant genotype (e.g., YH and HH compared with YY for HYL1*2). To assess combinations of the genotypes with functional relation to aflatoxin metabolism or activity, a variable was created that included the presence or absence of increasing numbers of low activity genotypes.
Frequency tables of independent variables and genotype data were evaluated for statistical significance by Pearson's
2 and Fisher's exact tests. To analyze the risk for HCC associated with each genotype while adjusting for confounders, multivariable unconditional logistic regression was done and odds ratios (OR) along with 95% confidence intervals (95% CI) generated. Adjusted models presented included variables known to vary by case-control status (age, sex, recruitment site, recruitment date, ethnic group, and socioeconomic status variables including education level and living in an earthen floor house) and variables known to be highly associated with HCC (HBV, HCV, and TP53 status; ref. 26). Interaction terms involving each of the primary explanatory variables (HBV, HCV, and TP53) and the polymorphism data were evaluated but none were significant to the P < 0.100 level and are not included in the adjusted models (data not shown). Ethnic status was determined by self-report of paternal ethnic group. The three largest ethnic groups in The Gambia are the Mandinka, Fula, and Wollof, which comprised 69.8% of study participants. To maintain evaluable numbers within categories, ethnic groups comprising <10% of the study population were grouped into a single category, the largest of these were the Jola (8.9%) and the Serahule (8.6%). Evaluation of each of the individual genotypes did not reveal any association with TP53 status. Whereas HBV infection is clearly associated with HCC, not all HCC cases will result from HBV-related hepatocarcinogenesis. Similarly, not all HCC cases, even some that are aflatoxin-related, will develop through TP53-mediated pathways. The only significant predictors of TP53 status in this study population were case-control status (P < 0.001), season of recruitment (P = 0.015), and groundnut intake (P = 0.05). Because TP53 status was not directly associated with the genotypes, TP53 was included in the adjusted analysis. The multivariate analysis presented includes models with and without inclusion of TP53 status and represents analysis on the 443 study participants with no missing data. Conditional analysis using similar methods on a postmatched data set comprised by individual matching of HCC cases to one control by age, gender, and site resulted in similar qualitative findings; however, these models were unstable due to decreased sample size (data not shown).
Groundnut intake has limited value as a surrogate for aflatoxin exposure in a case-control study design because of decreased consumption with disease. Despite this, the study participants reported significant groundnut consumption with an average intake of 6.0 servings per week for HCC cases and 6.2 servings a week for controls. To stratify those individuals likely to have the highest dietary AFB1 exposure, groundnut consumption was dichotomized to above the mean versus equal to or below the mean intake of all study participants (6.1 servings per week). Additional analysis for genotype associations with HCC was done, stratifying by potential effect modifiers (groundnut intake and HBsAg status). In a separate case-to-case analysis, the data from HCC cases only were evaluated by similar methods to look for differences in genotype-HCC associations by the primary explanatory variables (TP53, HBV, and HCV status).
| Results |
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Because of our previous work suggesting an effect modification of HBV infection on aflatoxin levels and on the effect of aflatoxin-related genes (29-31), we investigated the risk for HCC associated with the genetic polymorphisms separately among HBV carriers and among HBV uninfected participants. However, with all these stratified analyses, the interpretation of the findings and the degrees of significance were greatly limited due to sparse data. Stratified by HBsAg status, we found similar risk estimates of around a 2- to 3-fold increased HCC risk with the GSTM1-null genotype and with the combined XRCC1 AG/GG genotype in both strata (data not shown). The HYL1*2 HH/HY genotype displayed a 2.5-fold increased OR for HCC among HBsAg-negatives (OR, 2.49; 95% CI, 0.97-6.38) whereas no effect was seen among HBsAg-positives (OR, 0.96; 95% CI, 0.32-2.85).
Table 4 combines the data from the three genotypes [GSTM1 null, HYL1*2 (any H allele), and XRCC1 (any G allele)] postulated a priori to be involved in aflatoxin metabolism or DNA repair and that our data suggested an increase in HCC risk. Compared to subjects with all functional genotypes present, those with one or two "high-risk" genotypes had around a 3-fold increased HCC risk (OR, 2.81; 95% CI, 1.39-5.70 and OR, 3.33; 95% CI, 1.25-8.84, respectively), whereas having all three high-risk genotypes was associated with a 15-fold increased risk (OR, 14.7; 95% CI, 1.27-169). Although we observed an apparent "dose-response" effect on HCC risk with an increasing number of variant genotypes present, the risk estimates were imprecisely measured with wide CIs. Subsequently, gene-to-gene effects were examined by estimating HCC risk with combined genotype variables. For GSTM1 and XRCC1, the observed HCC risk with having either one of the high-risk genotypes was 2.15 (95% CI, 1.10-4.20) and it was 9.14 (95% CI, 2.20-38.0) with both high-risk genotypes present compared with neither. When the GSTM1 null and HYL1*2 HY/HH genotypes were combined into a single variable, there was no association with HCC for the combined effect, whereas a modest increase in risk was seen with either one present (Table 4). Conversely, with HYL1*2 HY/HH and XRCC1 AG/GG genotypes, the combined effect was notably increased compared with the risk with either genotype individually.
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| Discussion |
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Although a slight increase in HCC risk with the HYL1*2 HH genotype was suggested, the finding did not reach statistical significance in our study (Table 3). McGlynn et al. reported a 3-fold increased HCC risk in subjects with at least one H allele (21) but no association in a more recent study (23). In the first Chinese study, the increased risk with HYL1*2 genotype was limited to HBsAg-positive subjects. When we did multivariable analysis by HBV status, we observed a 2.5-fold increased risk of borderline statistical significance among HBsAg-negatives but no effect among HBV carriers. An increased HCC risk was previously observed in Sudanese subjects with the HH genotype and high groundnut consumption compared with those with the YY genotype and lower intake (13). In contrast, we did not observe any effect modification by level of groundnut consumption (data not shown).
Mechanistic evidence for a role of epoxide hydrolase in aflatoxin-related HCC is controversial. It is unclear whether the enzyme would influence the rapid spontaneous rate of hydrolysis of the aflatoxin-epoxide and hence the amount of binding to DNA (12, 18, 19). Nevertheless, the possibility that the enzyme influences HCC risk through an alternative pathway should not be ignored. A previous study of HCV-infected persons in Italy hypothesized that the polymorphism at this locus acted upon endogenous oxidative metabolites due to chronic viral infection rather than exogenous insults (22, 33). The fact that the elevation in risk was present in HBsAg-negative individuals in our study suggests that this pathway may be HCV-specific or that additional mechanisms may also be relevant. It should be noted that whereas HCV was responsible for a large proportion of HBV-negative HCC, the small number of HCV-positive controls limits our ability to assess whether effect modification by HCV status on HYL1*2 genotype and HCC risk is present or not.
This study also enabled us to evaluate polymorphisms in the DNA repair enzyme, XRCC1, with HCC risk. The polymorphism, a glycine for arginine substitution at codon 399 of exon 10, has previously been associated with a functional decrease in DNA repair of single-strand breaks (34) and an increased risk for a variety of cancers (35, 36). This polymorphism was also associated with increased levels of aflatoxin DNA adducts in Taiwanese women naturally exposed to aflatoxin through diet (24). Interestingly, the XRCC1-399G allele effect among Taiwanese women was greatest at lower adduct levels (24), possibly indicating that at high exposures, such as those occurring in The Gambia, this repair process may become saturated. We find an increase in HCC risk as hypothesized with the G allele (OR, 3.19; 95% CI, 1.35-7.53; Table 3) but did not find any significant effect modification by the level of groundnut consumption or by HBV status (data not shown). As with the GSTM1 null genotype, adjustment for plasma TP53 mutation status resulted in increased HCC risk estimates. These findings indicate that both XRCC1 and GSTM1 may contribute to HCC pathogenesis either by modulating the effects of other endogenous or exogenous carcinogens or of aflatoxin itself through additional non-TP53-mediated pathways (10).
In another recent report from Taiwan, Yu et al. (37) did not observe an independent increase in HCC risk with XRCC1-399G polymorphisms, although a trend was present. However, they found an effect modification of XRCC1 by glutathione S-transferase detoxification genes, with an increased HCC risk limited to XRCC1-GG and GSTT1-null subjects, whereas no similar effect was observed among GSTM1-null subjects.
When high-risk combinations of genotypes were compiled from the polymorphism data, a significantly increased HCC risk was observed with from 1 to 3 of the genotypes linked to aflatoxin metabolism in a dose-response manner (Table 4). Although we had limited statistical power to formally test for interactions, we examined the combined effect of different pairs of genotypes. Polymorphisms of either aflatoxin detoxification enzyme system (GSTM1-null or HYL1*2 HY/YY) combined with a polymorphism affecting DNA repair (XRCC1-399G) displayed notably increased risk estimates for the combined effect (Table 4). However, combined-effect ORs with GSTM1 and HYL1*2 that, theoretically, may be acting through similar steps in the aflatoxin metabolic pathway were not significant.
The GSTM1 null, GSTT1 null, and HYL1*2 HH genotypes were present in only 27%, 44%, and 5%, respectively, of adult Gambian control subjects, findings consistent with our earlier data in this population (30). This prevalence of the null GSTM1 genotype is much lower than reported in other African countries, e.g., Sudan (13) and Ghana (21), or in other ethnic groups worldwide (14, 38, 39). The low-activity HYL1*2 HH genotype prevalence (5%) in Gambians was also generally lower than Asian and European populations (China, 34%, ref. 21; United Kingdom, 19%, ref. 40; Italy, 15%, ref. 22) but was similar to other African populations (Sudan, 8%, ref. 13; Ghana, 8%, ref. 21).
Data collected over the last decade from the Gambia National Cancer Registry has suggested that the Fula ethnic group may have higher HCC incidence rates compared with the predominant ethnic group, Mandinka (2). Our previous studies showed that aflatoxin-albumin adduct levels were generally lower among Mandinka subjects than either Fula or Wollof subjects (31). In the present study, we identified ethnic variation in the prevalence of genetic polymorphisms, most notably a significantly higher prevalence of the variant Gly allele in the XRCC1-399 gene among the Fula (Table 2). Interestingly, we also have seen a higher risk for HCC associated with Fula ethnicity after multivariable adjustment. This raises the possibility that ethnicity could serve as marker of susceptible genotype, although differences in lifestyle also exist between these ethnic groups; for example, the Fula traditionally own more cattle and, therefore, may consume more milk and meat products than other ethnic groups.
There were several limitations to our study. Despite the Gambia Liver Cancer Study being one of the larger studies of HCC reported from Africa, we are still limited by small numbers of subjects in many of the high-risk genotype strata. Inclusion of larger numbers of participants would be helpful in gaining statistical power to better describe subgroup effects, such as for the analysis of gene-to-gene effects or stratified by groundnut status. Although effects of GSTM1 and XRCC1 on HCC risk were observed, the CIs were fairly close to 1.0, a frequent observation in studies of low penetrance effects. We did not investigate some other enzyme systems that may be potentially be involved in aflatoxin metabolism, including CYP1A2, CYP3A4, and CYP3A5; these were not included because functional polymorphisms are unidentified or only just being characterized in these genes (11, 41-45).
HCC is a significant health problem in sub-Saharan Africa with poor outcomes and limited treatment options. Prevention of HCC through childhood immunization with HBV vaccine will likely impact HCC incidence rates (46), but it remains unclear if the presence of additional HCC risk factors, including aflatoxin exposure, will limit the impact of vaccination. In addition, the large number of existing chronic HBV carriers remains susceptible to aflatoxin. Several interventions to reduce aflatoxin exposure are possible including chemoprevention (47) and some behavioral practices that may require little direct health expenditures (8). Improved markers of individual susceptibility to aflatoxins will contribute to developing the most appropriate intervention strategies in a given population.
| Acknowledgments |
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| Footnotes |
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The costs of publication of this article were defrayed in part by the payment of page charges. This article must therefore be hereby marked advertisement in accordance with 18 U.S.C. Section 1734 solely to indicate this fact.
7 G.D. Kirk, unpublished data. ![]()
Received 6/27/03; revised 6/15/04; accepted 8/24/04.
| References |
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(GSTT1): cDNA cloning and the characterization of a genetic polymorphism. Biochem J 1994;300:2716.
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