Interactions between genetic polymorphisms of glucose metabolizing genes and smoking and alcohol consumption in the risk of type 2 diabetes mellitus

Author:

Gao Kaiping1,Ren Yongcheng2,Wang Jinjin3,Liu Zichen1,Li Jianna1,Li Linlin2,Wang Bingyuan2,Li Hong1,Wang Yaxi1,Cao Yunkai1,Ohno Kinji4,Zhai Rihong1,Liang Zhen5

Affiliation:

1. Department of Preventive Medicine, Shenzhen University School of Medicine, 3688 Nanhai Road, Shenzhen, 518060, China.

2. Department of Epidemiology, College of Public Health, Zhengzhou University, Zhengzhou, 450001, China.

3. Department of Traditional Chinese Medicine Prevention, Preventive Medicine Research Evaluation Center, Henan University of Traditional Chinese Medicine, Zhengzhou, 450001, China.

4. Division of Neurogenetics, Center for Neurological Diseases and Cancer, University Graduate School of Medicine, Nagoya, 4668550, Japan.

5. Department of Geriatric Medicine, The 1st Affiliated Hospital of Shenzhen University, 3002 West Sungang Road, Shenzhen, 518035, China.

Abstract

The impact of gene-environment interaction on diabetes remains largely unknown. We aimed to investigate if interaction between glucose metabolizing genes and lifestyle factors is associated with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM). Interactions between genotypes of 4 glucose metabolizing genes (MTNR1B, KCNQ1, KLF14, and GCKR) and lifestyle factors were estimated in 722 T2DM patients and 759 controls, using multiple logistic regression. No significant associations with T2DM were detected for the single nucleotide polymorphisms of MTNR1B, KLF14 and GCKR. However, rs151290 (KCNQ1) polymorphisms were found to be associated with risk of T2DM. Compared with AA, the odds ratios (ORs) of AC or CC genotypes for developing T2DM were 1.545 (P = 0.0489) and 1.603 (P = 0.0383), respectively. In stratified analyses, the associations were stronger in smokers with CC than smokers with AA (OR = 3.668, P = 0.013); drinkers with AC (OR = 5.518, P = 0.036), CC (OR = 8.691, P = 0.0095), and AC+CC (OR = 6.764, P = 0.016) than drinkers with AA. Compared with nondrinkers with AA, drinkers who carry AC and CC had 12.072-fold (P = 0.0007) and 8.147-fold (P = 0.0052) higher risk of developing T2DM. In conclusions, rs151290 (KCNQ1) polymorphisms are associated with increased risk of T2DM, alone and especially in interaction with smoking and alcohol.

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing

Subject

Physiology (medical),Nutrition and Dietetics,Physiology,General Medicine,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism

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