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Volume 7, Issue 5 (Suppl)

J Community Med Health Educ

ISSN: 2161-0711 JCMHE, an open access journal

Public Health Congress 2017

November 13-14, 2017

November 13-14, 2017 Osaka, Japan

3

rd

World Congress on

Public Health, Nutrition & Epidemiology

Zinc transporter

SLC39A11

polymorphisms are associated with chronic gastritis in the Korean genome

and epidemiology study (KoGES)

Ji-Hyun Bae and Eunyoung

Keimyung University, Republic of Korea

Statement of the Problem:

To determine and search for the genes that are associated with gastritis and are possible therapeutic

targets for precision nutrition.

Methodology & Theoretical Orientation:

Participants in this cross-sectional study (n = 3882 + 252) were from a cohort of

the Korean Genome Epidemiology Study (KoGES) in 2001. Theage, gender, education, smoking and drinking status, exercise,

stress, and income level for all participants were determined via questionnaire. Demographic and anthropometric data were

collected. Fasting blood samples were collected to determine serum levels of glucose, insulin, total bilirubin, total cholesterol,

HDL-cholesterol, and triglycerides. The presence of chronic gastritis was defined as confirmed diagnosis by a physician. Food

consumption was determined using a semi-quantitative food frequency questionnaire.

Results:

(1) We found eight different single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) that are significantly different between

subjects without gastritis and those with gastritis. Of eight SNPs, three [rs17183225 (C/T), rs17780814 (A/C), and rs17780820

(A/G)] are closely located in the intronic region of zinc transporter

SLC39A11

, commonly known as

ZIP11

and show linkage

disequilibrium (D´=1.0). (2) We also found that participants with (TCA+TCG) haplotype of

ZIP11

, at high levels of dietary

intake of spicy foods, showed a significantly increasing tendency in odds of being having chronic gastritis when compared

with those with CAA haplotype (OR 2.620; 95% CI, 1.207-5.689). (3) Demographics analyses revealed that education, exercise,

income, and stress levels are associated with the presence of gastritis (all

P

< 0.001). After adjusting for confounding factors,

BMI, fasting glucose, macronutrient intakes, riboflavin, and coffee drinking are associated with gastritis (all

P

< 0.05). We also

found positive associations between higher meal frequency and lower spicy food preference and gastritis.

Conclusions:

Zinc transporter gene

ZIP11

is associated with chronic gastritis in the Korean population and may interact with

spicy food, which suggests

ZIP11

as a therapeutic target for precision nutrition.

Biography

Ji-Hyun Bae is a professor of Food Science and Nutrition at Keimyung University in Korea.She is an associate editor in Journal of Advanced Nutrition and Human

Metabolism, and was a visiting Professor of Pediatrics - Harvard Medical School/Massachusetts General Hospital

jhb@kmu.ac.kr

Ji-Hyun Bae et al., J Community Med Health Educ 2017, 7:5 (Suppl)

DOI: 10.4172/2161-0711-C1-031