Wan Jia Y, Goodman Deborah L, Willems Emileigh L, Freedland Alexis R, Norden-Krichmar Trina M, Santorico Stephanie A, Edwards Karen L
Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Program in Public Health, University of California, 635 E. Peltason Dr, Mail Code: 7550, Irvine, CA, 92697, USA.
Department of Mathematical and Statistical Sciences, University of Colorado, Denver, CO, USA.
Diabetol Metab Syndr. 2021 Jun 1;13(1):59. doi: 10.1186/s13098-021-00670-3.
To identify genetic associations of quantitative metabolic syndrome (MetS) traits and characterize heterogeneity across ethnic groups.
Data was collected from GENetics of Noninsulin dependent Diabetes Mellitus (GENNID), a multiethnic resource of Type 2 diabetic families and included 1520 subjects in 259 African-American, European-American, Japanese-Americans, and Mexican-American families. We focused on eight MetS traits: weight, waist circumference, systolic and diastolic blood pressure, high-density lipoprotein, triglycerides, fasting glucose, and insulin. Using genotyped and imputed data from Illumina's Multiethnic array, we conducted genome-wide association analyses with linear mixed models for all ethnicities, except for the smaller Japanese-American group, where we used additive genetic models with gene-dropping.
Findings included ethnic-specific genetic associations and heterogeneity across ethnicities. Most significant associations were outside our candidate linkage regions and were coincident within a gene or intergenic region, with two exceptions in European-American families: (a) within previously identified linkage region on chromosome 2, two significant GLI2-TFCP2L1 associations with weight, and (b) one chromosome 11 variant near CADM1-LINC00900 with pleiotropic blood pressure effects.
This multiethnic family study found genetic heterogeneity and coincident associations (with one case of pleiotropy), highlighting the importance of including diverse populations in genetic research and illustrating the complex genetic architecture underlying MetS.
确定定量代谢综合征(MetS)特征的基因关联,并描述不同种族间的异质性。
数据收集自非胰岛素依赖型糖尿病遗传学(GENNID),这是一个多民族的2型糖尿病家族资源库,包括259个非裔美国人、欧裔美国人、日裔美国人和墨西哥裔美国人家庭中的1520名受试者。我们重点关注八个MetS特征:体重、腰围、收缩压和舒张压、高密度脂蛋白、甘油三酯、空腹血糖和胰岛素。利用Illumina多民族芯片的基因分型和推算数据,我们对所有种族进行了全基因组关联分析,采用线性混合模型,但较小的日裔美国人组除外,该组我们使用了基因舍弃的加性遗传模型。
研究结果包括种族特异性基因关联和种族间的异质性。大多数显著关联位于我们的候选连锁区域之外,且在一个基因或基因间区域内一致,欧裔美国人家庭中有两个例外:(a)在先前确定的2号染色体连锁区域内,两个与体重显著相关的GLI2-TFCP2L1关联;(b)CADM1-LINC00900附近的一个11号染色体变体,对血压有多效性影响。
这项多民族家族研究发现了基因异质性和一致关联(有一例多效性),突出了在基因研究中纳入不同人群的重要性,并阐明了MetS潜在的复杂基因结构。