Karim Mohammad A, Craig Rebekah L, Wang Xiaoqin, Hale Terri C, Elbein Steven C
Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism, Department of Medicine, College of Medicine, University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences, Little Rock, AR, USA.
Mol Genet Metab. 2006 Jun;88(2):171-7. doi: 10.1016/j.ymgme.2006.01.003. Epub 2006 Feb 23.
The human forkhead box O1A (FOXO1A) gene on chromosome 13q14.1 is a key transcription factor in insulin signaling in liver and adipose tissue and plays a central role in the regulation of key pancreatic beta-cell genes including IPF1. We hypothesized that sequence variants of FOXO1A contribute to the observed defects in hepatic and peripheral insulin action and altered beta-cell compensation that characterize type 2 diabetes (T2DM). To test this hypothesis, we screened the three exons, 3' untranslated region, and 5' flanking region for sequence variants in Caucasian and African-American individuals with early onset (<45 years) T2DM. We identified only six variants; none altered the coding sequence, and except for one variant in the 3' untranslated region, they were rare or absent in Caucasians. To increase coverage of the gene, we selected seven additional variants in the large first intron and 5' flanking region, thus providing 13 variants that spanned 116.4kb. Based on frequency and linkage disequilibrium patterns in a subset of individuals, we selected eight SNPs to type in a Caucasian population comprising 192 unrelated nondiabetic control individuals and 192 individuals with T2DM, and 10 SNPs to type in 182 controls and 352 diabetic individuals of African-American ancestry. No variant was associated with T2DM (African-Americans, p>0.08; Caucasians, p>0.09). Of the 8 Caucasian SNPs, six comprised a single haplotype block spanning over 100kb and including most of the large first intron. In contrast, no block was observed among SNPs typed in African-Americans. No haplotype was associated with T2DM. FOXO1A variation is rare and is unlikely to contribute to T2DM in either Caucasian or African-American populations.
位于13q14.1染色体上的人类叉头框O1A(FOXO1A)基因是肝脏和脂肪组织中胰岛素信号传导的关键转录因子,在包括IPF1在内的关键胰腺β细胞基因的调控中发挥核心作用。我们推测,FOXO1A的序列变异导致了观察到的肝脏和外周胰岛素作用缺陷以及2型糖尿病(T2DM)特征性的β细胞代偿改变。为了验证这一假设,我们在早发(<45岁)T2DM的白种人和非裔美国人个体中,对三个外显子、3'非翻译区和5'侧翼区进行了序列变异筛查。我们仅鉴定出六个变异;没有一个变异改变编码序列,并且除了3'非翻译区的一个变异外,它们在白种人中很少见或不存在。为了增加该基因的覆盖范围,我们在大的第一内含子和5'侧翼区又选择了七个变异,从而提供了跨越116.4kb的13个变异。根据一部分个体中的频率和连锁不平衡模式,我们选择了八个单核苷酸多态性(SNP)在一个由192名无亲缘关系的非糖尿病对照个体和192名T2DM个体组成的白种人群中进行分型,以及10个SNP在182名对照个体和352名非裔美国血统的糖尿病个体中进行分型。没有变异与T2DM相关(非裔美国人,p>0.08;白种人,p>0.09)。在8个白种人SNP中,6个组成了一个跨越超过100kb并包括大部分大的第一内含子的单倍型块。相比之下,在非裔美国人分型的SNP中未观察到单倍型块。没有单倍型与T2DM相关。FOXO1A变异很少见,不太可能在白种人或非裔美国人人群中导致T2DM。