Availability of Type II Diabetic Families for Detection of Diabetes Susceptibility Genes

Author:

Cook Joanne T E1,Page Renée C L1,O'Rahilly Steven1,Levy Jonathan1,Holman Rury1,Barrow Beryl1,Hattersley Andrew T1,Shaw J Andrew G1,Wainscoat James S1,Turner Robert C1

Affiliation:

1. Diabetes Research Laboratories, Radcliffe Infirmary Oxford Department of Medicine, Addenbrooke's Hospital Cambridge Department of Hematology, John Radcliffe Hospital Oxford, United Kingdom

Abstract

Type II diabetes is a familial disorder, as evidenced by the increased prevalence in monozygotic cotwins and first-degree relatives of affected subjects; however, its genetic etiology is largely unknown. Well-characterized pedigrees are an essential resource for the study of susceptibility genes for type II diabetes. This study describes a 5-yr search for type II diabetic families in Oxfordshire, U.K. We interviewed 950 type II diabetic subjects concerning the availability of first-degree relatives; 127 Caucasian families ascertained through a proband with type II diabetes were studied, and 589 first-degree relatives were characterized. Three large pedigrees with maturity-onset diabetes of the young, and 8 multiplex multigenerational type II diabetic pedigrees were identified. We identified 12 sib-pairs in which both siblings had type II diabetes; however, only 7 sib-pairs had both parents alive, and 2 of these had both parents affected. If one also considers one sib having diabetes and one sib having glucose intolerance as being an affected sib-pair, we identified 30 sib-pairs of which 7 had both parents affected and probably had bilineal inheritance. We identified 76 complete nuclear families with both parents and offspring available for study, but only 6 were of optimal structure for linkage analysis. In conclusion, multiplex pedigrees and type II diabetic sib-pairs with living parents are uncommon, and their ascertainment requires a substantial investment of resources. Large-scale collaborative multicenter initiatives would be needed to collect a large resource of family material for the study of susceptibility genes for type II diabetes.

Publisher

American Diabetes Association

Subject

Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Internal Medicine

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