Haplotype Combinations of Calpain 10 Gene Polymorphisms Associate With Increased Risk of Impaired Glucose Tolerance and Type 2 Diabetes in South Indians
Author:
Cassell Paul G.1, Jackson Alan E.1, North Bernard V.2, Evans Julie C.3, Syndercombe-Court Denise4, Phillips Chris4, Ramachandran Ambady5, Snehalatha Chamukuttan5, Gelding Susan V.1, Vijayaravaghan Shanti1, Curtis David2, Hitman Graham A.1
Affiliation:
1. Department of Diabetes and Metabolic Medicine, Barts and the London Queen Mary’s School of Medicine and Dentistry, University of London, London 2. Joint Academic Department of Psychological Medicine, Barts and the London Queen Mary’s School of Medicine and Dentistry, University of London, London 3. Department of Diabetes and Vascular Medicine, School of Postgraduate Medicine and Health Sciences, University of Exeter, Exeter 4. Department of Haematology, Barts and the London Queen Mary’s School of Medicine and Dentistry, University of London, London 5. Diabetes Research Centre, Chennai, India
Abstract
Haplotype combination 112/121 and its intrinsic variants (UCSNP43, -19, and -63) identified within the calpain 10 gene are associated with increased risk of type 2 diabetes in Mexican-Americans. We evaluated whether this haplotype combination and its constituent haplotypes and variants contribute to increased susceptibility to impaired fasting glucose (IFG)/impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) and type 2 diabetes in a South Indian population. Two study groups were used: 95 families ascertained through a proband with type 2 diabetes and 468 subjects recruited as part of an urban survey (69.1% with normal glucose tolerance, 12.8% with IFG/IGT, and 18.2% with type 2 diabetes). The four-locus haplotype combination 1112/1121 (UCSNP44, -43, -19, and -63) in South Indians conferred both a 10.7-fold increased risk for IFG/IGT (P = 0.001) and a 5.78- to 6.52-fold increased risk for type 2 diabetes in the two study groups (families P = 0.025, urban survey P = 0.015). A combination of the 1112 haplotype with the 1221 haplotype also appeared to increase risk for both IFG/IGT and type 2 diabetes. Contrary to what might be expected, quantitative trait analysis in the families found that transmission of the disease-related 1121 and 1112 haplotypes was associated with a reduced hip size and lower waist-to-hip ratio, respectively. This study supports the paradigm that specific haplotype combinations of calpain 10 variants increase risk of both IFG/IGT and type 2 diabetes. However, the relative infrequency of the “at-risk” combinations in the South Indian population suggests that calpain 10 is not a common determinant of susceptibility to type 2 diabetes.
Publisher
American Diabetes Association
Subject
Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Internal Medicine
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