Identification of susceptibility variants in ADIPOR1 gene associated with type 2 diabetes, coronary artery disease and the comorbidity of type 2 diabetes and coronary artery disease
Autor: | Xiang Li, Xiaohong Shi, Fan Yang, Lianmei Pu, Duo Yang, Liang Sun, Weijun Chen, Fan Zhao, Chen-Guang Zheng, Xiaoquan Zhu, Zhang Yurong, Wang Nana, Huagang Zhu, Ze Yang, Hong Li, Ruofei Jia, Shuai Meng, Zening Jin, Wandong Zhang, Xinmiao Yang, Yi-Ge Yang, Hui Juan, Qin Zhou, Nan Nan |
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Jazyk: | angličtina |
Rok vydání: | 2014 |
Předmět: |
Male
Oncology genetic association Genotyping Techniques endocrine system diseases Epidemiology genotype Gene Identification and Analysis lcsh:Medicine Comorbidity Coronary Artery Disease Type 2 diabetes genetic risk Vascular Medicine Coronary artery disease single nucleotide polymorphism Ethnicity Medicine and Health Sciences lcsh:Science Genetics Multidisciplinary non insulin dependent diabetes mellitus adult Han Chinese Middle Aged Type 2 Diabetes Phenotype Research Design Genetic Epidemiology Female Receptors Adiponectin Research Article medicine.medical_specialty Clinical Research Design Single-nucleotide polymorphism adiponectin receptor 1 Research and Analysis Methods Polymorphism Single Nucleotide Asian People Internal medicine Diabetes Mellitus medicine Humans Genetic Predisposition to Disease cardiovascular diseases Allele Genetic Association Studies AdipoR1 gene Aged Evolutionary Biology Adiponectin business.industry lcsh:R Case-control study Biology and Life Sciences nutritional and metabolic diseases Human Genetics Odds ratio case control study medicine.disease major clinical study Diabetes Mellitus Type 2 Case-Control Studies Metabolic Disorders Genetics of Disease Genetic Polymorphism lcsh:Q business human activities Population Genetics genetic susceptibility |
Zdroj: | PLoS ONE, Vol 9, Iss 6, p e100339 (2014) PLoS ONE |
ISSN: | 1932-6203 |
Popis: | Objective: Adiponectin receptor 1 (encoded by ADIPOR1) is one of the major adiponectin receptors, and plays an important role in glucose and lipid metabolism. However, few studies have reported simultaneous associations between ADIPOR1 variants and type 2 diabetes (T2D), coronary artery disease (CAD) and T2D with CAD. Based on the "common soil" hypothesis, we investigated whether ADIPOR1 polymorphisms contributed to the etiology of T2D, CAD, or T2D with CAD in a Northern Han Chinese population. Methods: Our multi-disease comparison study enrolled 657 subjects, including 165 with T2D, 173 with CAD, 174 with both T2D and CAD (T2D+CAD), and 145 local healthy controls. Six ADIPOR1 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) were genotyped and their association with disease risk was analyzed. Results: Multi-case-control comparison identified two ADIPOR1 variants: rs3737884-G, which was simultaneously associated with an increased risk of T2D, CAD, and T2D+CAD (P-value range, 9.80×10-5-6.30×10-4; odds ratio (OR) range: 1.96-2.42) and 16850797-C, which was separately associated with T2D and T2D+CAD (P-value range: 0.007-0.014; OR range: 1.71-1.77). The risk genotypes of both rs3737884 and 16850797 were consistently associated with common metabolic phenotypes in all three diseases (P-value range: 4.81×10 -42-0.001). We observed an increase in the genetic dose-dependent cumulative risk with increasing risk allele numbers in T2D, CAD and T2D+CAD (Ptrend from 1.35×10-5-0.002). Conclusions: Our results suggest that ADIPOR1 risk polymorphisms are a strong candidate for the "common soil" hypothesis and could partially contribute to disease susceptibility to T2D, CAD, and T2D with CAD in the Northern Han Chinese population. © 2014 Jin et al. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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