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J. Taboulet, M. Frenkian, J. L. Frendo, N. Feingold, A. Jullienne, M. C. de Vernejoul, Calcitonin Receptor Olymorphism is Associated with a Decreased Fracture Risk in Post-Menopausal Women, Human Molecular Genetics, Volume 7, Issue 13, December 1998, Pages 2129–2133, https://doi.org/10.1093/hmg/7.13.2129
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Abstract
High bone resorption by the osteoclast results in osteoporosis, a disease affecting 40% of women after the menopause. Calcitonin, used to treat osteoporosis, inhibits bone resorption via receptors located on the osteoclasts. Two alleles of the calcitonin receptor gene (CTR) exist: a base mutation T→C in the third intra-cellular C-terminal domain changes a proline (CCG) at position 447 to a leucine (CTG). We therefore studied the distribution of these alleles in a cohort of 215 post-menopausal Caucasian women suffering or not from osteoporotic fractures. The region of interest within the point mutation was amplified by PCR and screened for single strand conformation polymorphism. This work was followed by DNA sequencing of the fragments amplified. We found that bone mineral density (BMD) at the femoral neck was significantly higher in heterozygous subjects with the Rr genotype compared with the homozygous leucine (RR) and homozygous proline (rr) genotypes. Also, a decreased fracture risk was observed in heterozygote subjects. In conclusion, our results suggest that polymorphism of CTR could be associated with osteoporotic fractures and BMD in a population of post-menopausal women. CTR heterozygotes could produce both alleles of the receptor. The heterozygous advantage effect of Rr subjects could explain their protection against osteoporosis: higher bone density and decreased fracture risk. Establishing the genotype of the CTR gene in post-menopausal women could be of value in evaluating their risk of developing fractures.
- alleles
- osteoporosis
- polymerase chain reaction
- menopause
- mutation
- polymorphism
- bone mineral density
- calcitonin
- fractures
- bone resorption
- neck of femur
- genes
- genotype
- heterozygote
- homozygote
- leucine
- osteoclasts
- point mutation
- polymorphism, single-stranded conformational
- postmenopause
- proline
- calcitonin receptors
- sequence analysis, dna
- european continental ancestry group
- osteoporotic fractures
- osteoporotic fracture risk