The CYP19 Gene and Associations with Androgens and Abdominal Obesity in Premenopausal Women

F Baghaei, R Rosmond, L Westberg…�- Obesity�…, 2003 - Wiley Online Library
F Baghaei, R Rosmond, L Westberg, M Hellstrand, E Eriksson, G Holm, P Bj�rntorp
Obesity Research, 2003Wiley Online Library
Objective: Elevated androgens in women are associated with type 2 diabetes and are
dependent on the conversion to estrogens by aromatase cytochrome P450. Polymorphisms
of a tetranucleotide repeat [TTTA] n in the fourth intron of the CYP19 gene are associated
with endocrine‐dependent diseases and were examined in relation to hormone levels and
disease risk factors in premenopausal women. Research Methods and Procedures: A
population sample of women born in 1956 (n= 270) were genotyped for this polymorphism�…
Abstract
Objective: Elevated androgens in women are associated with type 2 diabetes and are dependent on the conversion to estrogens by aromatase cytochrome P450. Polymorphisms of a tetranucleotide repeat [TTTA]n in the fourth intron of the CYP19 gene are associated with endocrine‐dependent diseases and were examined in relation to hormone levels and disease risk factors in premenopausal women.
Research Methods and Procedures: A population sample of women born in 1956 (n = 270) were genotyped for this polymorphism and the results set in relation to steroid hormones, including saliva cortisol, anthropometric variables, estimates of insulin, glucose and lipid metabolism, and blood pressure.
Results: Seven tetranucleotide repeat [TTTA]n alleles were detected with allelic sizes of 168 to 195 bp, with a TCT deletion/insertion (168/171 bp) upstream of this microsatellite. Smoking was associated with elevated androgens (p = 0.005 to 0.019). Using the median (average stretch, 177.5 bp) as a dividing line, nonsmoking women with the shorter microsatellite had higher free testosterone (p = 0.018) and lower sex hormone binding globulin (p = 0.033). These differences were pronounced with the 168‐bp allele. Such women were also characterized by a less‐substantial decrease of morning cortisols (“unwinding”; p = 0.035) and central obesity (abdominal sagittal diameter, p = 0.049) and had waist/hip circumference ratios of borderline significance (p = 0.064).
Discussion: The results indicate that, in premenopausal women, a short microsatellite in the fourth intron of the CYP19 gene, caused by a TCT deletion upstream the [TTTA]n tract, is associated with elevated androgens, perturbed regulation of the hypothalamic‐pituitary‐adrenal axis, and abdominal obesity.
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