Abstract
Lung cancer is a multifactorial carcinoma with diverse heterogeneity. Genetic variations in drug-metabolizing enzymes may lead to defective detoxification and clearance of carcinogenic compounds. The high-order gene-gene interaction has been carried out between different genotypes of Phase II detoxification genes (NQO1, SULT1A1, NAT2, and EPHX1). Our results depict the genetic combination of SULT1A1 R213H with NAT2 × 5B L161L, SULT1A1 R213H with NAT2 × 5C K268R, EPHX1 H139R and NAT2 × 5B L161L exhibit a protective effect towards lung cancer risk. Further, the triple combinations of NQO1 P187S, EPHX1 Y113H, and EPHX1 H139R; NQO1 P187S, EPHX1 Y113H, and NAT2 × 6 R197Q; NQO1 P187S, EPHX1 Y113H, and NAT2 × 7 G286E; SULT1A1 R213H, EPHX1 H139R, and NAT2 × 7 G286E suggested a two-fold increased risk of lung cancer for subjects. Genetic polymorphisms of phase II detoxifying genes (NAT2, NQO1, EPHX1, SULT1A1) are prognostic markers for lung cancer.
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Walia, H. K., Sharma, P., Singh, N., & Sharma, S. (2024). Synergistic polymorphic interactions of phase II metabolizing genes and their association toward lung cancer susceptibility in North Indians. International Journal of Environmental Health Research, 34(1), 103–126. https://doi.org/10.1080/09603123.2022.2133095
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