Association Analysis in African Americans of European-Derived Type 2 Diabetes Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms From Whole-Genome Association Studies
Open Access
- 1 August 2008
- journal article
- Published by American Diabetes Association in Diabetes
- Vol. 57 (8) , 2220-2225
- https://doi.org/10.2337/db07-1319
Abstract
Several whole-genome association studies have reported identification of type 2 diabetes susceptibility genes in various European-derived study populations. Little investigation of these loci has been reported in other ethnic groups, specifically African Americans. Striking differences exist between these populations, suggesting they may not share identical genetic risk factors. Our objective was to examine the influence of type 2 diabetes genes identified in whole-genome association studies in a large African American case-control population. Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in 12 loci (e.g., TCF7L2, IDE/KIF11/HHEX, SLC30A8, CDKAL1, PKN2, IGF2BP2, FLJ39370, and EXT2/ALX4) associated with type 2 diabetes in European-derived populations were genotyped in 993 African American type 2 diabetic and 1,054 African American control subjects. Additionally, 68 ancestry-informative markers were genotyped to account for the impact of admixture on association results. Little evidence of association was observed between SNPs, with the exception of those in TCF7L2, and type 2 diabetes in African Americans. One TCF7L2 SNP (rs7903146) showed compelling evidence of association with type 2 diabetes (admixture-adjusted additive P [P(a)] = 1.59 x 10(-6)). Only the intragenic SNP on 11p12 (rs9300039, dominant P [P(d)] = 0.029) was also associated with type 2 diabetes after admixture adjustments. Interestingly, four of the SNPs are monomorphic in the Yoruba population of the HAPMAP project, with only the risk allele from the populations of European descent present. Results suggest that these variants do not significantly contribute to interindividual susceptibility to type 2 diabetes in African Americans. Consequently, genes contributing to type 2 diabetes in African Americans may, in part, be different from those in European-derived study populations. High frequency of risk alleles in several of these genes may, however, contribute to the increased prevalence of type 2 diabetes in African Americans.Keywords
This publication has 21 references indexed in Scilit:
- Variants of the Transcription Factor 7-Like 2 (TCF7L2) Gene Are Associated With Type 2 Diabetes in an African-American Population Enriched for NephropathyDiabetes, 2007
- Genome-wide association study of 14,000 cases of seven common diseases and 3,000 shared controlsNature, 2007
- A Genome-Wide Association Study of Type 2 Diabetes in Finns Detects Multiple Susceptibility VariantsScience, 2007
- A Common Variant in the FTO Gene Is Associated with Body Mass Index and Predisposes to Childhood and Adult ObesityScience, 2007
- A genome-wide genotyping study in patients with ischaemic stroke: initial analysis and data releaseThe Lancet Neurology, 2007
- A genome-wide association study identifies novel risk loci for type 2 diabetesNature, 2007
- Regional Admixture Mapping and Structured Association Testing: Conceptual Unification and an Extensible General Linear ModelPLoS Genetics, 2006
- A haplotype map of the human genomeNature, 2005
- Estimation of individual admixture: Analytical and study design considerationsGenetic Epidemiology, 2005
- Haploview: analysis and visualization of LD and haplotype mapsBioinformatics, 2004