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An autosomal genomic scan for loci linked to prediabetic phenotypes in Pima Indians

Authors :
Eric Ravussin
Peter H. Bennett
David M. Mott
Margaret G. Ehm
Robert L. Hanson
Richard E. Pratley
W. C. Knowler
C Bogardus
D K Burns
D B Thompson
Leslie J. Baier
Tatiana Foroud
Hakan Sakul
Michal Prochazka
W T Garvey
Source :
The Journal of clinical investigation. 101(8)
Publication Year :
1998

Abstract

Type 2 diabetes mellitus is a common chronic disease that is thought to have a substantial genetic basis. Identification of the genes responsible has been hampered by the complex nature of the syndrome. Abnormalities in insulin secretion and insulin action predict the development of type 2 diabetes and are, themselves, highly heritable traits. Since fewer genes may contribute to these precursors of type 2 diabetes than to the overall syndrome, such genes may be easier to identify. We, therefore, undertook an autosomal genomic scan to identify loci linked to prediabetic traits in Pima Indians, a population with a high prevalence of type 2 diabetes. 363 nondiabetic Pima Indians were genotyped at 516 polymorphic microsatellite markers on all 22 autosomes. Linkage analyses were performed using three methods (single-marker, nonparametric multipoint [MAPMAKER/SIBS], and variance components multipoint). These analyses provided evidence for linkage at several chromosomal regions, including 3q21-24 linked to fasting plasma insulin concentration and in vivo insulin action, 4p15-q12 linked to fasting plasma insulin concentration, 9q21 linked to 2-h insulin concentration during oral glucose tolerance testing, and 22q12-13 linked to fasting plasma glucose concentration. These results suggest loci that may harbor genes contributing to type 2 diabetes in Pima Indians. None of the linkages exceeded a LOD score of 3.6 (a 5% probability of occurring in a genome-wide scan). These findings must, therefore, be considered tentative until extended in this population or replicated in others.

Details

ISSN :
00219738
Volume :
101
Issue :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of clinical investigation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....698853c48fd2b028d6d77fa25e1d9c99