A Genome-Wide Association Study of Gestational Diabetes Mellitus in Korean Women

Author:

Kwak Soo Heon1,Kim Sung-Hoon2,Cho Young Min1,Go Min Jin3,Cho Yoon Shin3,Choi Sung Hee1,Moon Min Kyong1,Jung Hye Seung1,Shin Hyoung Doo4,Kang Hyun Min5,Cho Nam H.6,Lee In Kyu7,Kim Seong Yeon1,Han Bok-Ghee3,Jang Hak C.1,Park Kyong Soo18

Affiliation:

1. Department of Internal Medicine, Seoul National University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea

2. Department of Medicine, Kwandong University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea

3. Center for Genome Science, Korea National Institute of Health, Osong Health Technology Administration Complex, Chungcheongbuk-do, Korea

4. Department of Life Science, Sogang University, Seoul, Korea

5. Department of Biostatistics, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan

6. Department of Preventive Medicine, Ajou University School of Medicine, Suwon, Korea

7. Department of Internal Medicine, Kyungpook National University School of Medicine, Daegu, Korea

8. World Class University Department of Molecular Medicine and Biopharmaceutical Sciences, Graduate School of Convergence Science and Technology and College of Medicine, Seoul National University, Seoul, Korea

Abstract

Knowledge regarding the genetic risk loci for gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) is still limited. In this study, we performed a two-stage genome-wide association analysis in Korean women. In the stage 1 genome scan, 468 women with GDM and 1,242 nondiabetic control women were compared using 2.19 million genotyped or imputed markers. We selected 11 loci for further genotyping in stage 2 samples of 931 case and 783 control subjects. The joint effect of stage 1 plus stage 2 studies was analyzed by meta-analysis. We also investigated the effect of known type 2 diabetes variants in GDM. Two loci known to be associated with type 2 diabetes had a genome-wide significant association with GDM in the joint analysis. rs7754840, a variant in CDKAL1, had the strongest association with GDM (odds ratio 1.518; P = 6.65 × 10−16). A variant near MTNR1B, rs10830962, was also significantly associated with the risk of GDM (1.454; P = 2.49 × 10−13). We found that there is an excess of association between known type 2 diabetes variants and GDM above what is expected under the null hypothesis. In conclusion, we have confirmed that genetic variants in CDKAL1 and near MTNR1B are strongly associated with GDM in Korean women. There seems to be a shared genetic basis between GDM and type 2 diabetes.

Publisher

American Diabetes Association

Subject

Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Internal Medicine

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