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Genetic Variants Contribute to Phenotypic Heterogeneity of Type 1 Diabetes.

Citation
Redondo, M. J., et al. “ Genetic Variants Contribute To Phenotypic Heterogeneity Of Type 1 Diabetes.”. Diabetes Care, pp. 311-317.
Center University of Washington
Author Maria J Redondo, Susan Geyer, Andrea K Steck, Jay Sosenko, Mark Anderson, Peter Antinozzi, Aaron Michels, John Wentworth, Ping Xu, Alberto Pugliese, Type 1 Diabetes TrialNet Study Group
Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The phenotypic diversity of type 1 diabetes suggests heterogeneous etiopathogenesis. We investigated the relationship of type 2 diabetes-associated transcription factor 7 like 2 () single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) with immunologic and metabolic characteristics at type 1 diabetes diagnosis.

RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: We studied TrialNet participants with newly diagnosed autoimmune type 1 diabetes with available rs4506565 and rs7901695 SNP data ( = 810; median age 13.6 years; range 3.3-58.6). We modeled the influence of carrying a variant (i.e., having 1 or 2 minor alleles) on the number of islet autoantibodies and oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT)-stimulated C-peptide and glucose measures at diabetes diagnosis. All analyses were adjusted for known confounders.

RESULTS: The rs4506565 variant was a significant independent factor of expressing a single autoantibody, instead of multiple autoantibodies, at diagnosis (odds ratio [OR] 1.66 [95% CI 1.07, 2.57], = 0.024). Interaction analysis demonstrated that this association was only significant in participants ≥12 years old ( = 504; OR 2.12 [1.29, 3.47], = 0.003) but not younger ones ( = 306, = 0.73). The rs4506565 variant was independently associated with higher C-peptide area under the curve (AUC) ( = 0.008) and lower mean glucose AUC ( = 0.0127). The results were similar for the rs7901695 SNP.

CONCLUSIONS: In this cohort of individuals with new-onset type 1 diabetes, type 2 diabetes-linked variants were associated with single autoantibody (among those ≥12 years old), higher C-peptide AUC, and lower glucose AUC levels during an OGTT. Thus, carriers of the variant had a milder immunologic and metabolic phenotype at type 1 diabetes diagnosis, which could be partly driven by type 2 diabetes-like pathogenic mechanisms.

Year of Publication
2018
Journal
Diabetes care
Volume
41
Issue
2
Number of Pages
311-317
Date Published
12/2018
ISSN Number
1935-5548
DOI
10.2337/dc17-0961
Alternate Journal
Diabetes Care
PMID
29025879
PMCID
PMC5780048
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