The influence of biallelic polymorphisms in the tumour necrosis factor-alpha (TNF alpha), lymphotoxin-alpha (LT alpha) and interleukin-10 (IL-10) genes on stimulated TNF alpha and IL-10 production was studied in ulcerative colitis (UC) patients, Crohn's disease (CD) patients and in healthy controls.
Genotyping for IL-1ra, TNF alpha and TNF beta gene polymorphisms was performed by the polymerase chain reaction in 95 patients with ulcerative colitis and 74 healthy controls.
In 153 patients with IBD, 64 with Crohn's disease (CD), and 89 with ulcerative colitis (UC), as well as in 54 healthy controls (HC), the frequencies of four known di-allelic polymorphisms in the genes for TNF-alpha and lymphotoxin alpha (LTalpha) were investigated.
The results showed that no significant differences existed in the genotype frequencies of the NcoI polymorphism in the first intron of the LT alpha gene between ulcerative colitis patients or Crohn's disease patients and the healthy controls.
To clarify the molecular relationship between HLA loci and ulcerative colitis (UC) in Japanese patients, we performed HLA-DP genotyping by the PCR-RFLP method and studied tumor necrosis factor beta-chain genetic polymorphism by Southern hybridization, in addition to conventional serologic typing.