Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/42580
Title: The GGN and CAG repeat polymorphisms in the exon-1 of the androgen receptor gene are, respectively, associated with insulin resistance in men and with dyslipidemia in women
Authors: Rodríguez-González, Germán
Ramírez Moreno, Raquel 
Pérez, Patricia
Bilbao, Cristina 
López-Ríos, Laura
Diaz-Chico, Juan C. 
Lara, Pedro C.
Serra Majem, Luis 
Chirino Godoy, Ricardo 
Díaz Chico, B. Nicolás 
UNESCO Clasification: 32 Ciencias médicas
Keywords: Low density lipoprotein-cholesterol
Androgen receptor
CAG repeat polymorphism
GGN repeat polymorphism
Insulin, et al
Issue Date: 2009
Publisher: 0960-0760
Journal: Journal of Steroid Biochemistry and Molecular Biology 
Abstract: The human androgen receptor (AR) gene possesses two trinucleotide repeats of CAG and GGN in exon-1. The GGN repeat affects the amount of AR protein translated, while the CAG repeat affects the efficiency of AR transcriptionaly. In this study, we have genotyped these polymorphic tracts in a representative sample of 557 Caucasian adult individuals (314 women and 243 men) from the Canary Islands, Spain (the ENCA Study), and investigated their association with fasting serum levels of lipids, glucose and insulin. The number of CAG repeats in women (expressed as the average length of the two alleles) was inversely correlated with serum levels of LDL-cholesterol (Spearman rho =−0.179; P < 0.01).Women with an averagenumber of CAGrepeats in the upper tertile showed significantly lower levels of LDL-cholesterol than those grouped in the lower and middle tertile, after adjusting for age, body mass index,waist-to-hip ratio, smoking and alcohol drinking. Thenumber ofGGNrepeats inmenwas correlatedwith fasting insulin levels (Spearman rho =−0.206; P < 0.01), the homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance (HOMAIR; Spearman rho =−0.230; P < 0.01) and the McAuley index of insulin sensitivity (Spearman rho = 0.194; P < 0.01). Men with a number of GGN repeats in the upper tertile showed lower levels of insulin and HOMA and a higher level of the McAuley index than those grouped in the lower and middle tertile, after adjusting for the variables listed above. These results support the hypothesis that the longer alleles of the CAG and GGN polymorphisms in the exon-1 of the AR gene, indicative of lower androgenic signaling, respectively protect women from developing dyslipemia and men from developing insulin resistance.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10553/42580
ISSN: 0960-0760
DOI: 10.1016/j.jsbmb.2008.12.009
Source: Journal Of Steroid Biochemistry And Molecular Biology[ISSN 0960-0760],v. 113 (3-5), p. 202-208
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