Association between insulin secretion, insulin sensitivity and type 2 diabetes susceptibility variants identified in genome-wide association studies

被引:0
作者
Stephanie-May Ruchat
Cathy E. Elks
Ruth J. F. Loos
Marie-Claude Vohl
S. John Weisnagel
Tuomo Rankinen
Claude Bouchard
Louis Pérusse
机构
[1] Laval University,Department of Preventive Medicine
[2] CHUL Research Center,Lipid Research Center
[3] Institute of Metabolic Science,Medical Research Council Epidemiology Unit
[4] Pennington Biomedical Research Center,Human Genomics Laboratory
[5] Laval University,Division of Kinesiology, Department of Social and Preventive Medicine, Faculty of Medicine
来源
Acta Diabetologica | 2009年 / 46卷
关键词
Glucose tolerance; Insulin secretion; Insulin sensitivity; Diabetes-associated polymorphisms;
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摘要
Several single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) for type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) risk have been identified by genome wide association studies (GWAS). The objective of the present study was to investigate the impact of these SNPs on T2DM intermediate phenotypes in order to clarify the physiological mechanisms through which they exert their effects on disease etiology. We analysed 23 SNPs in 9 T2DM genes (CDKAL1, CDKN2B, HHEX/IDE, IGF2BP2, KCNJ11, SLC30A8, TCF2, TCF7L2 and WFS1) in a maximum of 712 men and women from the Quebec Family Study. The participants underwent a 75 g oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) and were measured for glucose, insulin and C-peptide levels. Indices of insulin sensitivity and insulin secretion were derived from fasting and OGTT measurements. We confirmed the significant associations of variants in CDKAL1, CDKN2B, HHEX/IDE, KCNJ11 and TCF7L2 with insulin secretion and also found associations of some of these variants with insulin sensitivity and glucose tolerance. IGF2BP2 and SLC30A8 SNPs were not associated with insulin secretion but were with insulin sensitivity and glucose tolerance (0.002 ≤ P ≤ 0.02). To examine the joint effects of these variants and their contribution to T2DM endophenotypes variance, stepwise regression models were used and the model R2 was computed. The variance in the phenotypes explained by combinations of variants ranged from 2.0 to 8.5%. Diabetes-associated variants in CDKAL1, CDKN2B, HHEX/IDE, IGF2BP2, KCNJ11, SLC30A8 and TCF7L2 are associated with physiological alterations leading to T2DM, such as glucose intolerance, impaired insulin secretion or insulin resistance, supporting their role in the disease aetiology. These variants were found to account for 2.0–8.5% of the variance of T2DM-related traits.
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