Back to Search Start Over

Common Variants at 10 Genomic Loci Influence Hemoglobin A(1C) Levels via Glycemic and Nonglycemic Pathways

Authors :
Daniel Barnes
Benjamin Voight
Amelie Bonnefond
Ruth Loos
Eco De Geus
Alexander Teumer
Goncalo Abecasis
Nicole Soranzo
Serena Sanna
Ozren Polasek
Juliane Winkelmann
Augustine Kong
ROBERTO ELOSUA
Michael Stumvoll
David Altshuler
Udo Seedorf
Ines Barroso
Felicity Payne
Nabila Bouatia-Naji
Christian Gieger
Robert Sladek
Sophie Gallina
Mariano Dei
Claudia Langenberg
Josee Dupuis
Man Li
James Pankow
Sally Ricketts
Mark Fleming
James F Wilson
Eleanor Wheeler
Peter Kovacs
Alexandre Stewart
Inga Prokopenko
Philippe Froguel
Panos Deloukas
Nita Forouhi
Jeanette Erdmann
Matthew Heeney
Reedik Mägi
Patrik Magnusson
Marcus Kleber
Thomas Meitinger
Massimo Mangino
Caroline Hayward
MANUELA UDA
Christa Meisinger
Rona Strawbridge
Manuel Serrano Ríos
Ida Surakka
Anuj Goel
Gonneke Willemsen
Konrad Oexle
Mark McCarthy
Olle Melander
Muredach Reilly
Igor Rudan
Alistair Hall
Hugh Watkins
Biological Psychology
EMGO+ - Lifestyle, Overweight and Diabetes
Department of Chemical Engineering [Stanford]
Stanford University
École nationale supérieure d'architecture de Nantes (ENSA Nantes)
Génétique des maladies multifactorielles (GMM)
Université de Lille, Droit et Santé-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
Évolution, Écologie et Paléontologie (Evo-Eco-Paleo) - UMR 8198 (Evo-Eco-Paléo)
Université de Lille-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
Évolution, Écologie et Paléontologie (Evo-Eco-Paleo) - UMR 8198 (Evo-Eco-Paléo (EEP))
Source :
Diabetes, 59(12), 3229-3239. AMER DIABETES ASSOC, Diabetes, 59(12), 3229-3239. American Diabetes Association Inc., Diabetes, Diabetes, American Diabetes Association, 2010, 59 (12), pp.3229-3239. ⟨10.2337/db10-0502⟩, Diabetes; Vol 59, Soranzo, N, Sanna, S, Wheeler, E, Gieger, C, Radke, D, Dupuis, J, Bouatia-Naji, N, Langenberg, C, Prokopenko, I, Stolerman, E, Boomsma, D I, de Geus, E J C, Peltonen, L, Willemsen, G, Abecasis, G R, Boehnke, M, Froguel, P, Groop, L, McCarthy, M I, Kao, W H L, Florez, J C, Uda, M, Wareham, N J, Barroso, I & Meigs, J B 2010, ' Common Variants at 10 Genomic Loci Influence Hemoglobin A1C Levels via Glycemic and Nonglycemic Pathways ', Diabetes, vol. 59, no. 12, pp. 3229-3239 . https://doi.org/10.2337/db10-0502, Diabetes, 2010, 59 (12), pp.3229-3239. ⟨10.2337/db10-0502⟩
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

OBJECTIVE Glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c), used to monitor and diagnose diabetes, is influenced by average glycemia over a 2- to 3-month period. Genetic factors affecting expression, turnover, and abnormal glycation of hemoglobin could also be associated with increased levels of HbA1c. We aimed to identify such genetic factors and investigate the extent to which they influence diabetes classification based on HbA1c levels. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS We studied associations with HbA1c in up to 46,368 nondiabetic adults of European descent from 23 genome-wide association studies (GWAS) and 8 cohorts with de novo genotyped single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). We combined studies using inverse-variance meta-analysis and tested mediation by glycemia using conditional analyses. We estimated the global effect of HbA1c loci using a multilocus risk score, and used net reclassification to estimate genetic effects on diabetes screening. RESULTS Ten loci reached genome-wide significant association with HbA1c, including six new loci near FN3K (lead SNP/P value, rs1046896/P = 1.6 × 10−26), HFE (rs1800562/P = 2.6 × 10−20), TMPRSS6 (rs855791/P = 2.7 × 10−14), ANK1 (rs4737009/P = 6.1 × 10−12), SPTA1 (rs2779116/P = 2.8 × 10−9) and ATP11A/TUBGCP3 (rs7998202/P = 5.2 × 10−9), and four known HbA1c loci: HK1 (rs16926246/P = 3.1 × 10−54), MTNR1B (rs1387153/P = 4.0 × 10−11), GCK (rs1799884/P = 1.5 × 10−20) and G6PC2/ABCB11 (rs552976/P = 8.2 × 10−18). We show that associations with HbA1c are partly a function of hyperglycemia associated with 3 of the 10 loci (GCK, G6PC2 and MTNR1B). The seven nonglycemic loci accounted for a 0.19 (% HbA1c) difference between the extreme 10% tails of the risk score, and would reclassify ∼2% of a general white population screened for diabetes with HbA1c. CONCLUSIONS GWAS identified 10 genetic loci reproducibly associated with HbA1c. Six are novel and seven map to loci where rarer variants cause hereditary anemias and iron storage disorders. Common variants at these loci likely influence HbA1c levels via erythrocyte biology, and confer a small but detectable reclassification of diabetes diagnosis by HbA1c.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00121797 and 1939327X
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Diabetes, 59(12), 3229-3239. AMER DIABETES ASSOC, Diabetes, 59(12), 3229-3239. American Diabetes Association Inc., Diabetes, Diabetes, American Diabetes Association, 2010, 59 (12), pp.3229-3239. ⟨10.2337/db10-0502⟩, Diabetes; Vol 59, Soranzo, N, Sanna, S, Wheeler, E, Gieger, C, Radke, D, Dupuis, J, Bouatia-Naji, N, Langenberg, C, Prokopenko, I, Stolerman, E, Boomsma, D I, de Geus, E J C, Peltonen, L, Willemsen, G, Abecasis, G R, Boehnke, M, Froguel, P, Groop, L, McCarthy, M I, Kao, W H L, Florez, J C, Uda, M, Wareham, N J, Barroso, I & Meigs, J B 2010, ' Common Variants at 10 Genomic Loci Influence Hemoglobin A1C Levels via Glycemic and Nonglycemic Pathways ', Diabetes, vol. 59, no. 12, pp. 3229-3239 . https://doi.org/10.2337/db10-0502, Diabetes, 2010, 59 (12), pp.3229-3239. ⟨10.2337/db10-0502⟩
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....e6f14ae2b68da9359c1493486bb654ca
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.2337/db10-0502⟩