Revista Argentina de Antropología Biológica (Dec 2018)

NAT2 and oral clefts: evaluation of genetic risk and the relative importance of embryo and maternal genotypes

  • Maria Rita Santos,
  • Hebe Campaña,
  • Laura Smeldy Jurado Medina,
  • Camila Sala,
  • Marina Muzzio,
  • Jorge Santiago Lopez-Camelo,
  • Graciela Bailliet

DOI
https://doi.org/10.17139/raab.2019.0021.01.08
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 1

Abstract

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Non-syndromic cleft lip with or without cleft palate (NSCLP) is a congenital malformation that shows the characteristics of a multifactorial pathology. In order to describe the genetic predisposition to this disorder, NAT genes were analyzed with special interest since they codify for N-acetyltransferases, the enzymes responsible for the biotransformation of arylamines, hydrazine drugs and a great number of toxins and carcinogens present in diet, cigarette smoke and the environment. The allelic transmission of NAT2 that determines the slow acetylator phenotype in 174 trios (case-mother/father) from ECLAMC (Latin American Collaborative Study of Congenital Malformations) maternities in Argentina was evaluated. The *4, *5B, *6, and *7 variants by PCR-RFLP were analyzed. A higher risk for the 5B*5B* genotypes (OR=2. 24; p=0.050) was found, at the expense of the cases from Patagonia, without the influence of the maternal genotype.