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Excess maternal transmission of variants in the THADA gene to offspring with type 2 diabetes

Authors :
Peter Kovacs
Emily Sonestedt
Marju Orho-Melander
Rashmi B. Prasad
Nikolay Oskolkov
Wenny Poon
Tiinamaija Tuomi
Claes B. Wollheim
Michael Lachmann
Yuedan Zhou
Györgyi Kovács
Anna Lessmark
Márta Vitai
Leif Groop
Ola Hansson
João Fadista
Claes Ladenvall
László Korányi
Svante Pääbo
Michael Stumvoll
Peter Almgren
Clinicum
Tiinamaija Tuomi Research Group
Department of Medicine
Institute for Molecular Medicine Finland
Leif Groop Research Group
Source :
Diabetologia, Vol. 59, No 8 (2016) pp. 1702-1713
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have identified more than 65 genetic loci associated with risk of type 2 diabetes. However, the contribution of distorted parental transmission of alleles to risk of type 2 diabetes has been mostly unexplored. Our goal was therefore to search for parent-of-origin effects (POE) among type 2 diabetes loci in families. Families from the Botnia study (n = 4,211, 1,083 families) were genotyped for 72 single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) associated with type 2 diabetes and assessed for POE on type 2 diabetes. The family-based Hungarian Transdanubian Biobank (HTB) (n = 1,463, >135 families) was used to replicate SNPs showing POE. Association of type 2 diabetes loci within families was also tested. Three loci showed nominal POE, including the previously reported variants in KCNQ1, for type 2 diabetes in families from Botnia (rs2237895: p POE = 0.037), which can be considered positive controls. The strongest POE was seen for rs7578597 SNP in the THADA gene, showing excess transmission of the maternal risk allele T to diabetic offspring (Botnia: p POE = 0.01; HTB p POE = 0.045). These data are consistent with previous evidence of allelic imbalance for expression in islets, suggesting that the THADA gene can be imprinted in a POE-specific fashion. Five CpG sites, including those flanking rs7578597, showed differential methylation between diabetic and non-diabetic donor islets. Taken together, the data emphasise the need for genetic studies to consider from which parent an offspring has inherited a susceptibility allele.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0012186X
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Diabetologia, Vol. 59, No 8 (2016) pp. 1702-1713
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....65e611399384c7abb82e9dc781f02e28