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Öğe Pulmonary and extrapulmonary tuberculosis CCL1 in patients with rs159294 T/A gene Polymorphysm(2013) Özdemir, Fethi Ahmet; Erol, Deniz; Yyüce, Hüseyin; Konar, Vahit; Kara Şenli, Ebru; Bulut, Funda; Deveci, FigenInvestigation of CCL1 rs159294 T/A gene polymorphism in pulmonary and extrapulmonary tuberculosis patients Introduction: The purpose of this study is to reveal whether CCL1 rs159294 T/A polymorphism in pulmonary and extra-pulmonary tuberculosis patients pose a risk to catch tuberculosis or not. Materials and Methods: In the study, peripheral blood samples from the control group, which includes 160 patients, who consulted to Fi{dotless}rat University Faculty of Medicine, Pulmonology Policlinic in Elazi{dotless}? province and who were diagnosed with tuberculosis; and 160 healthy individuals, were taken and put into tubes containing EDTA. Each tube contained 2 cc blood samples. DNA isolation was made from these blood samples and CCL1 rs159294 T/A polymorphism was defined with PCR-RFLP analysis. Results: For CCL1 rs159294 T/A polymorphism, TT genotype was found in 98 (61.3%) patients, TA genotype was found in 58 (36.3%) patients, AA genotype was found in 4 (2.5%) patients among 160 patients with tuberculosis; and TT genotype was found in 50 (70.4%) patients, TA genotype in 20 (28.2%) patients, AA genotype was found in 1 (1.4%) patient among 71 patients with pulmonary tuberculosis; TT genotype was found in 48 (53.9%) patients TA genotype was found in 38 (42.7%) patients and AA genotype was found in 3 (3.4%) patients among 89 extrapulmonary tuberculosis patients. And in control group, among 160 healthy individuals, TT genotype was found in 100 (62.5%) individuals, TA genotype was found in 58 (36.3%) individuals, AA genotype was found in 2 (1.3%) individuals and no statistically significant difference was found. Conclusion: CCL1 rs159294 T/A polymorphism do not form an inclination to tuberculosis in our population.