Introduction: Etiology of sarcoidosis is unknown but the prevalence of disease in different ethnic groups and identical twins, family characteristics indicate that genetic predisposition is a possible factor. The angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) has been implicated in the pahophysiology of sarcoidosis. The aim of this study is to investigate the influence of a polymorphism in I/D (Insertion/Deletion) of the ACE gene on the susceptibility to sarcoidosis.
Patients and methods: Our study included 70 Turkish patients who had histopathological diagnosis of sarcoidosis and 69 healthy age and sex matched control subjects. Polymerase chain reaction was used for analysing an I/D polymorphism in the gene coding for ACE. Genotyping was done according to bands that were formed on the agarose gel electrophoresis. Chi-square test was used for statistical analysis and p< 0.05 was accepted as significance.
Results: Although the D allele was more frequent in the sarcoidosis patients group, the frequency of the D allele was 67% and 54% respectively in the sarcoidosis and the control group. No significant difference in allele frequencies of I/I, I/D, D/D polymorphisms was observed between the sarcoidosis and control group (p> 0.05). Similarly allele frequencies of I/I, I/D, D/D polymorphisms was not different between sarcoidosis patients with extrapulmonary involvement and sarcoidosis patients without extrapulmonary involvement (p> 0.05).
Conclusion: Our findings have showed that contribution of ACE gene polymorphisms to susceptibility of disease development in Turkish sarcoidosis patients is not different from the healthy control subjects.