Onengut-Gumuscu Suna, Concannon Patrick, Akolkar Beena, Erlich Henry A, Julier Cécile, Morahan Grant, Nierras Concepcion R, Pociot Flemming, Todd John A, Rich Stephen S
Department of Genome Sciences, The University of Virginia, Charlottesville, VA 22908, USA.
Department of Pathology, Immunology and Laboratory Medicine, Genetics Institute, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32610, USA.
J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2025 May 19;110(6):1505-1513. doi: 10.1210/clinem/dgaf181.
Type 1 diabetes (T1D) results from the autoimmune destruction of the insulin-producing β cells. Genetic factors account for approximately 50% of the risk for T1D but, by the late 1990s, the genetic basis was limited. The Type 1 Diabetes Genetics Consortium (T1DGC) was formed in 2002 to accelerate discovery of genes contributing to T1D risk through a grant from the National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases (NIDDK) to assemble existing data and samples from affected sib-pair families and to establish new collections. In recognition of the 75th anniversary of the NIDDK, this manuscript highlights the contributions made by the T1DGC to understanding the genetic basis of T1D using both family (for linkage) and case-control (for genome-wide association) designs. The T1DGC conducted large-scale genetic research and used fine mapping to define risk regions. The T1DGC data, results, and samples have been made available to the scientific community, leading to the discovery of more than 100 loci associated with T1D risk, many with small effects and relevant to autoimmune pathways. The T1DGC not only expanded the list of genes contributing to disease risk but also identified noncoding genetic variation in disease-relevant cell types that contribute to the etiology of T1D. The success of the T1DGC and the NIDDK investment in the global consortium is highlighted in its continuing effect on mapping genetic variants to their function and identifying pathways that provide new targets for the prediction, prevention, and treatment of T1D.
1型糖尿病(T1D)是由产生胰岛素的β细胞发生自身免疫性破坏所致。遗传因素约占T1D发病风险的50%,但到20世纪90年代末,其遗传基础仍很有限。1型糖尿病遗传学联盟(T1DGC)于2002年成立,通过美国国立糖尿病、消化和肾脏疾病研究所(NIDDK)的资助,加速发现与T1D风险相关的基因,以整合来自患病同胞对家庭的现有数据和样本,并建立新的数据集。值此NIDDK成立75周年之际,本文着重介绍了T1DGC在利用家系(用于连锁分析)和病例对照(用于全基因组关联研究)设计来理解T1D遗传基础方面所做的贡献。T1DGC开展了大规模遗传研究,并采用精细定位来确定风险区域。T1DGC的数据、结果和样本已提供给科学界,从而发现了100多个与T1D风险相关的基因座,其中许多基因座的影响较小且与自身免疫途径相关。T1DGC不仅扩充了与疾病风险相关的基因列表,还在与疾病相关的细胞类型中鉴定出了非编码遗传变异,这些变异有助于T1D的病因学研究。T1DGC的成功以及NIDDK对全球联盟的投资,突出体现在其对将遗传变异与其功能进行定位以及确定可为T1D的预测、预防和治疗提供新靶点的途径方面所产生的持续影响。