Assessing the association between hypoxia during craniofacial development and oral clefts
Abstract Objectives To evaluate the association between hypoxia during embryo development and oral clefts in an animal model, and to evaluate the association between polymorphisms in the HIF-1A gene with oral clefts in human families. Material and Methods The study with the animal model used zebrafish embryos at 8 hours post-fertilization submitted to 30% and 50% hypoxia for 24 hours. At 5 days post-fertilization, the larvae were fixed. The cartilage structures were stained to evaluate craniofacial phenotypes. The family-based association study included 148 Brazilian nuclear families with oral clefts. The association between the genetic polymorphisms rs2301113 and rs2057482 in HIF-1A with oral clefts was tested. We used real time PCR genotyping approach. ANOVA with Tukey's post-test was used to compare means. The transmission/disequilibrium test was used to analyze the distortion of the inheritance of alleles from parents to their affected offspring. Results For the hypoxic animal model, the anterior portion of the ethmoid plate presented a gap in the anterior edge, forming a cleft. The hypoxia level was associated with the severity of the phenotype (p<0.0001). For the families, there was no under-transmitted allele among the affected progeny (p>0.05). Conclusion Hypoxia is involved in the oral cleft etiology, however, polymorphisms in HIF-1A are not associated with oral clefts in humans.
Main Authors: | , , , , , , , , , , , |
---|---|
Format: | Digital revista |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Faculdade De Odontologia De Bauru - USP
2018
|
Online Access: | http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1678-77572018000100456 |
Tags: |
Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
|
id |
oai:scielo:S1678-77572018000100456 |
---|---|
record_format |
ojs |
spelling |
oai:scielo:S1678-775720180001004562018-05-15Assessing the association between hypoxia during craniofacial development and oral cleftsKüchler,Erika CalvanoSilva,Lea Assed daNelson-Filho,PauloSabóia,Ticiana M.Rentschler,Angela M.Granjeiro,José MauroOliveira,DrielyTannure,Patricia N.Silva,Raquel Assed daAntunes,Leonardo SantosTsang,MichaelVieira,Alexandre R. Gene Genetic Children Abstract Objectives To evaluate the association between hypoxia during embryo development and oral clefts in an animal model, and to evaluate the association between polymorphisms in the HIF-1A gene with oral clefts in human families. Material and Methods The study with the animal model used zebrafish embryos at 8 hours post-fertilization submitted to 30% and 50% hypoxia for 24 hours. At 5 days post-fertilization, the larvae were fixed. The cartilage structures were stained to evaluate craniofacial phenotypes. The family-based association study included 148 Brazilian nuclear families with oral clefts. The association between the genetic polymorphisms rs2301113 and rs2057482 in HIF-1A with oral clefts was tested. We used real time PCR genotyping approach. ANOVA with Tukey's post-test was used to compare means. The transmission/disequilibrium test was used to analyze the distortion of the inheritance of alleles from parents to their affected offspring. Results For the hypoxic animal model, the anterior portion of the ethmoid plate presented a gap in the anterior edge, forming a cleft. The hypoxia level was associated with the severity of the phenotype (p<0.0001). For the families, there was no under-transmitted allele among the affected progeny (p>0.05). Conclusion Hypoxia is involved in the oral cleft etiology, however, polymorphisms in HIF-1A are not associated with oral clefts in humans.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessFaculdade De Odontologia De Bauru - USPJournal of Applied Oral Science v.26 20182018-01-01info:eu-repo/semantics/articletext/htmlhttp://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1678-77572018000100456en10.1590/1678-7757-2017-0234 |
institution |
SCIELO |
collection |
OJS |
country |
Brasil |
countrycode |
BR |
component |
Revista |
access |
En linea |
databasecode |
rev-scielo-br |
tag |
revista |
region |
America del Sur |
libraryname |
SciELO |
language |
English |
format |
Digital |
author |
Küchler,Erika Calvano Silva,Lea Assed da Nelson-Filho,Paulo Sabóia,Ticiana M. Rentschler,Angela M. Granjeiro,José Mauro Oliveira,Driely Tannure,Patricia N. Silva,Raquel Assed da Antunes,Leonardo Santos Tsang,Michael Vieira,Alexandre R. |
spellingShingle |
Küchler,Erika Calvano Silva,Lea Assed da Nelson-Filho,Paulo Sabóia,Ticiana M. Rentschler,Angela M. Granjeiro,José Mauro Oliveira,Driely Tannure,Patricia N. Silva,Raquel Assed da Antunes,Leonardo Santos Tsang,Michael Vieira,Alexandre R. Assessing the association between hypoxia during craniofacial development and oral clefts |
author_facet |
Küchler,Erika Calvano Silva,Lea Assed da Nelson-Filho,Paulo Sabóia,Ticiana M. Rentschler,Angela M. Granjeiro,José Mauro Oliveira,Driely Tannure,Patricia N. Silva,Raquel Assed da Antunes,Leonardo Santos Tsang,Michael Vieira,Alexandre R. |
author_sort |
Küchler,Erika Calvano |
title |
Assessing the association between hypoxia during craniofacial development and oral clefts |
title_short |
Assessing the association between hypoxia during craniofacial development and oral clefts |
title_full |
Assessing the association between hypoxia during craniofacial development and oral clefts |
title_fullStr |
Assessing the association between hypoxia during craniofacial development and oral clefts |
title_full_unstemmed |
Assessing the association between hypoxia during craniofacial development and oral clefts |
title_sort |
assessing the association between hypoxia during craniofacial development and oral clefts |
description |
Abstract Objectives To evaluate the association between hypoxia during embryo development and oral clefts in an animal model, and to evaluate the association between polymorphisms in the HIF-1A gene with oral clefts in human families. Material and Methods The study with the animal model used zebrafish embryos at 8 hours post-fertilization submitted to 30% and 50% hypoxia for 24 hours. At 5 days post-fertilization, the larvae were fixed. The cartilage structures were stained to evaluate craniofacial phenotypes. The family-based association study included 148 Brazilian nuclear families with oral clefts. The association between the genetic polymorphisms rs2301113 and rs2057482 in HIF-1A with oral clefts was tested. We used real time PCR genotyping approach. ANOVA with Tukey's post-test was used to compare means. The transmission/disequilibrium test was used to analyze the distortion of the inheritance of alleles from parents to their affected offspring. Results For the hypoxic animal model, the anterior portion of the ethmoid plate presented a gap in the anterior edge, forming a cleft. The hypoxia level was associated with the severity of the phenotype (p<0.0001). For the families, there was no under-transmitted allele among the affected progeny (p>0.05). Conclusion Hypoxia is involved in the oral cleft etiology, however, polymorphisms in HIF-1A are not associated with oral clefts in humans. |
publisher |
Faculdade De Odontologia De Bauru - USP |
publishDate |
2018 |
url |
http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1678-77572018000100456 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT kuchlererikacalvano assessingtheassociationbetweenhypoxiaduringcraniofacialdevelopmentandoralclefts AT silvaleaassedda assessingtheassociationbetweenhypoxiaduringcraniofacialdevelopmentandoralclefts AT nelsonfilhopaulo assessingtheassociationbetweenhypoxiaduringcraniofacialdevelopmentandoralclefts AT saboiaticianam assessingtheassociationbetweenhypoxiaduringcraniofacialdevelopmentandoralclefts AT rentschlerangelam assessingtheassociationbetweenhypoxiaduringcraniofacialdevelopmentandoralclefts AT granjeirojosemauro assessingtheassociationbetweenhypoxiaduringcraniofacialdevelopmentandoralclefts AT oliveiradriely assessingtheassociationbetweenhypoxiaduringcraniofacialdevelopmentandoralclefts AT tannurepatrician assessingtheassociationbetweenhypoxiaduringcraniofacialdevelopmentandoralclefts AT silvaraquelassedda assessingtheassociationbetweenhypoxiaduringcraniofacialdevelopmentandoralclefts AT antunesleonardosantos assessingtheassociationbetweenhypoxiaduringcraniofacialdevelopmentandoralclefts AT tsangmichael assessingtheassociationbetweenhypoxiaduringcraniofacialdevelopmentandoralclefts AT vieiraalexandrer assessingtheassociationbetweenhypoxiaduringcraniofacialdevelopmentandoralclefts |
_version_ |
1756428926210539520 |