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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Polymorphisms in FTO and near TMEM18 associate with type 2 diabetes and predispose to younger age at diagnosis of diabetes

Iveta VaivadeHelgi B. SchiöthVita RoviteDāvids FridmanisJosefin A. JacobssonIneta KalninaIneta KalninaK. GeldnereRaitis PeculisJanis KlovinsMarkus Sällman AlménValdis PiragsValdis PiragsLiene Nikitina-zakeLinda Zaharenko

subject

Linkage disequilibriumendocrine system diseasesPopulationAlpha-Ketoglutarate-Dependent Dioxygenase FTOSingle-nucleotide polymorphismLocus (genetics)Genome-wide association studyBiologyPolymorphism Single NucleotideFTO geneGeneticsmedicineHumansSNPAge of OnseteducationGeneticseducation.field_of_studyAge FactorsMembrane ProteinsProteinsnutritional and metabolic diseasesGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseaseObesityDiabetes Mellitus Type 2

description

Variations in the FTO gene and near the TMEM18 gene are risk factors for common form of obesity, but have also been linked with type 2 diabetes (T2D). Our aim was to investigate the contribution of these variants to risk of T2D in a population in Latvia. Four single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) in the first and fourth intronic regions of FTO and one close to TMEM18 were genotyped in 987 patients with T2D and 1080 controls selected from the Latvian Genome Data Base (LGDB). We confirmed association of SNPs in the first intron (rs11642015, rs62048402 and rs9939609) of FTO and rs7561317 representing the TMEM18 locus with T2D. Association between SNP in FTO and T2D remained significant after correction for body mass index (BMI). The rs57103849 located in the fourth intron of FTO and rs7561317 in TMEM18 showed BMI independent association with younger age at diagnosis of T2D. Our results add to the evidence that BMI related variants in and near FTO and TMEM18 may increase the risk for T2D not only through secondary effects of obesity. The influence of variants in the fourth intron of the FTO gene on development of T2D may be mediated by mechanisms other than those manifested by SNPs in the first intron of the same gene.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gene.2013.06.079