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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Identifying Risk Genes for Cervical Cancer : Using Affected Sib-Pairs and Case-Control Materials from Sweden

Engelmark, Malin January 2006 (has links)
<p>Cervical cancer is a multifactorial disease. Infection by oncogenic types of the human papillomavirus (HPV) is the major environmental risk factor and host genetic susceptibility also influences disease development. </p><p>The aim of this thesis is to identify and analyse risk genes involved in the genetic predisposition to cervical carcinoma. A unique and extensive population-based affected sib-pair (ASP) material and a large case-control sample were used in the investigations.</p><p>In paper I the human leukocyte antigen (HLA) class II DQB1 and DRB1 loci are confirmed, for the first time in a family-based material, as genetic susceptibility factors for cervical cancer. It is also proposed that the HLA class II DPB1 locus independently contributes to risk of developing disease. In addition, no evidence is found for an involvement of the class I HLA-B and HLA-A loci in the genetic predisposition. Paper II conclude that the Fas receptor –670 single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) do not have a major impact on the susceptibility to cervical carcinoma <i>in situ</i> in the Swedish population. In paper III we show that interactions between the HPV16 E6 gene subtype and host HLA class II genotype potentially occur during infection and disease progression. Paper IV suggests that three chromosomal regions, 9q32, 12q24 and 16q24, contain risk factors of low to moderate effects on cervical cancer development. In paper V linkage signals are further identified between a 9q32 gene encoding the thymic stromal co-transporter (TSCOT) and the disease in ASPs with mean age over 30.5 years at diagnosis within the sib-pair.</p><p>These findings are important contributions towards understanding more about the aetiology of this complex cancer. The identification of new susceptibility regions opens up for further characterisation, replication and candidate gene analysis.</p>
2

Identifying Risk Genes for Cervical Cancer : Using Affected Sib-Pairs and Case-Control Materials from Sweden

Engelmark, Malin January 2006 (has links)
Cervical cancer is a multifactorial disease. Infection by oncogenic types of the human papillomavirus (HPV) is the major environmental risk factor and host genetic susceptibility also influences disease development. The aim of this thesis is to identify and analyse risk genes involved in the genetic predisposition to cervical carcinoma. A unique and extensive population-based affected sib-pair (ASP) material and a large case-control sample were used in the investigations. In paper I the human leukocyte antigen (HLA) class II DQB1 and DRB1 loci are confirmed, for the first time in a family-based material, as genetic susceptibility factors for cervical cancer. It is also proposed that the HLA class II DPB1 locus independently contributes to risk of developing disease. In addition, no evidence is found for an involvement of the class I HLA-B and HLA-A loci in the genetic predisposition. Paper II conclude that the Fas receptor –670 single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) do not have a major impact on the susceptibility to cervical carcinoma in situ in the Swedish population. In paper III we show that interactions between the HPV16 E6 gene subtype and host HLA class II genotype potentially occur during infection and disease progression. Paper IV suggests that three chromosomal regions, 9q32, 12q24 and 16q24, contain risk factors of low to moderate effects on cervical cancer development. In paper V linkage signals are further identified between a 9q32 gene encoding the thymic stromal co-transporter (TSCOT) and the disease in ASPs with mean age over 30.5 years at diagnosis within the sib-pair. These findings are important contributions towards understanding more about the aetiology of this complex cancer. The identification of new susceptibility regions opens up for further characterisation, replication and candidate gene analysis.
3

Genetic Studies of Alzheimer's Disease

Blom, Elin January 2008 (has links)
Patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) often have a family history of the disease, implicating genetics as a major risk factor. Three genes are currently known to cause familial early-onset AD (&lt;65 years): the amyloid precursor protein (APP) and the presenilins (PSEN1 and PSEN2). For the much more common late-onset disease (&gt;65 years), only the APOE gene has repeatedly been associated to AD, where the ε4 allele increases disease risk and decreases age at onset. As APOE ε4 only explains part of the total estimated disease risk, more genes are expected to contribute to AD. This thesis has focused on the study of genetic risk factors involved in AD. In the first study, we conducted a linkage analysis of six chromosomes previously implicated in AD in a collection of affected relative pairs from Sweden, the UK and the USA. An earlier described linkage peak on chromosome 10q21 could not be replicated in the current sample, while significant linkage was demonstrated to chromosome 19q13 where the APOE gene is located. The linkage to 19q13 was further analyzed in the second study, demonstrating no significant evidence of genes other than APOE contributing to this peak. In the third study, the prevalence of APP duplications, a recently reported cause of early-onset AD, was investigated. No APP duplications were identified in 141 Swedish and Finnish early-onset AD patients, implying that this is not a common disease mechanism in the Scandinavian population. In the fourth study, genes with altered mRNA levels in the brain of a transgenic AD mouse model (tgAPP-ArcSwe) were identified using microarray analysis. Differentially expressed genes were further analyzed in AD brain. Two genes from the Wnt signaling pathway, TCF7L2 and MYC, had significantly increased mRNA levels in both transgenic mice and in AD brains, implicating cell differentiation and possibly neurogenesis in AD.

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