Q36R polymorphism of KiSS-1 gene in Brazilian head and neck cancer patients.
Ruiz. Mariângela Torreglosa MT; Galbiatti. Ana Lívia Silva AL; Pavarino. Erika Cristina EC; Maniglia. José Victor JV; Goloni-Bertollo. Eny Maria EM
Key Findings
- KiSS-1 (kisspeptin) acts as a metastasis‑suppressor protein.
- The Q36R polymorphism frequency was similar between cancer patients and healthy controls overall.
- A higher frequency of the Q36R variant was observed specifically in pharyngeal cancer cases.
Practical Outcomes
- There’s no actionable guidance for biohackers from this work; it simply notes a possible genetic link to a specific cancer type, which doesn’t translate into supplement or lifestyle recommendations.
Summary
Researchers checked a specific genetic variation (Q36R) in the kisspeptin gene among Brazilian head‑and‑neck cancer patients and healthy people. Overall, the variation wasn’t more common in cancer patients, but it showed up a bit more in those with pharyngeal cancer. The study doesn’t give any direct tips for using kisspeptin supplements or protocols for health or performance.
Abstract
The KiSS-1 metastasis-suppressor gene (KiSS-1) product (metastin, kisspeptin) is reported to act after binding with the natural ligand of a G-protein coupled receptor and this gene product inhibits chemotaxis, invasion, and metastasis of cells. The aim of this study was to evaluate the Q36R polymorphism of KiSS-1 in patients with head and neck cancer and to compare the results with healthy individuals and its association with clinicopathological parameters. Gender, age, smoking and alcohol consumption were analyzed for 744 individual (252 head and neck cancer patients and in 522 control individuals). The molecular analysis of these individuals was made after extraction of genomic DNA using the SSCP-PCR technique. This study did not reveal any significant differences in genotype frequencies between healthy individuals and patients with head and neck cancer or with the clinical parameters. This study showed an increase frequency of the Q36R polymorphism in pharyngeal cancer.
Study Information
pubmed
2012
2012-01-01T00:00:00.000Z
10.1007/s11033-011-1416-8