5′ Flanking Variants of Resistin Are Associated With Obesity

Author:

Engert James C.1,Vohl Marie-Claude23,Williams Scott M.14,Lepage Pierre1,Loredo-Osti J C.5,Faith Janet1,Doré Carole1,Renaud Yannick1,Burtt Noël P.6,Villeneuve Amélie1,Hirschhorn Joel N.678,Altshuler David679,Groop Leif C.10,Després Jean-Pierre2311,Gaudet Daniel12,Hudson Thomas J.156

Affiliation:

1. Montreal Genome Centre, McGill University Health Centre Research Institute, Montréal, Canada

2. Lipid Research Center, CHUQ Pavillion CHUL, Québec, Canada

3. Department of Food Sciences and Nutrition, Laval University, Québec, Canada

4. Department of Microbiology, Meharry Medical College, Nashville, Tennessee

5. Department of Human Genetics, McGill University, Montréal, Canada

6. Whitehead Institute/Massachusetts Institute of Technology Center for Genome Research, Cambridge, Massachusetts

7. Department of Genetics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts

8. Divisions of Genetics and Endocrinology, Children’s Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts

9. Department of Molecular Biology and Diabetes Unit, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts

10. Department of Endocrinology, Wallenberg Laboratory, Malmö University Hospital, University of Lund, Malmö, Sweden

11. Quebec Heart Institute, Laval Hospital Research Center, Sainte-Foy, Canada

12. Dyslipidemia, Diabetes and Atherosclerosis Group and Community Genomics Research Center, CHUM, Université de Montréal and Complexe Hospitalier de la Sagamie, Chicoutimi, Canada

Abstract

Diabetes and obesity have long been known to be related. The recently characterized adipocyte hormone resistin (also called FIZZ3/ADSF) has been implicated as a molecular link between impaired glucose tolerance (IGT) and obesity in mice. A search for sequence variants at the human resistin locus identified nine single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) but no coding variants. An investigation into the association of these SNPs with diabetes and obesity revealed two 5′ flanking variants (g.-537 and g.-420), in strong linkage disequilibrium, that are associated with BMI. In nondiabetic individuals from the Quebec City area and the Saguenay-Lac-St-Jean region of Quebec, the g.-537 mutation (allelic frequency = 0.04) was significantly associated with an increase in BMI (P = 0.03 and P = 0.01, respectively). When the data from these two populations were combined and adjusted for age and sex, both the g.-537 (odds ratio [OR] 2.72, 95% CI 1.28–5.81) and the g.-420 variants (1.58, 1.06–2.35) were associated with an increased risk for a BMI ≥30 kg/m2. In contrast, in case/control and family-based study populations from Scandinavia, we saw no effect on BMI with either of these promoter variants. No association was seen with diabetes in any of the population samples.

Publisher

American Diabetes Association

Subject

Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Internal Medicine

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