Authors |
L. Spor, J. C. Carlson, J. Wehr, E. M. Russell, M. Krishnan, S. Liu, H. Cheng, T. Naseri, M. Reupena, S. Viali, J. Tuitele, E. E. Kershaw, R. Deka, N. L. Hawley, S. T. McGarvey, D. E. Weeks, R. L. Minster
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Abstract Text |
Introduction: Globally, 462 million (1 in 16) people have type 2 diabetes (T2D), and the prevalence is higher in Samoa, affecting 1 in 4 Samoans. Polynesians are underrepresented in biomedical research, yet they may have population-specific variants important for understanding T2D. To better understand the genetics of metabolic traits relevant to T2D in Samoans, we performed meta-analysis GWASs of fasting glucose, fasting insulin, and homeostatic model assessment for insulin resistance (HOMA-IR).
Methods: We recruited 3 cohorts from Samoa and/or American Samoa in 1990, 2002, and 2010, totaling 5,174 participants. We genotyped the participants with the Illumina Global Screening Array or Affymetrix 6.0 array and performed genome-wide imputation using a Samoan-specific haplotype reference panel. Fasting glucose and fasting insulin levels were determined, and HOMA-IR was calculated from fasting glucose and insulin values. Participants who reported using diabetes medications were excluded. We performed genome-wide association testing on the remaining 4,333 participants using linear mixed models adjusted for the fixed effects of age, sex, and ancestral principal components derived from PC-AiR, and for random effects of kinship derived from PC-Relate. The results from each of the 3 cohorts were combined with p-value-based meta-analysis with METAL.
Results: No SNVs were statistically significant (p ˂ 5×10-8) in the 3 GWASs. The most significant variant associated with fasting glucose was rs373863828 (p = 8.2×10-8, MAF = 27%), a missense variant in CREBRF, which is known to be associated with higher BMI and lower odds of T2D in Samoans. Following the CREBRF finding, fasting glucose had a suggestive association with an intronic variant in LINC00877 (rs902318467, p = 1.9×10-7, MAF = 2.4%), a lncRNA gene which contains many enhancer-like signals and is located < 500kb upstream of PROK2 and FOXP1, two genes involved in glucose homeostasis. The first two introns of PARD3B contained 86 variants that were statistically suggestive for an association with fasting insulin. Lastly, the peak variant associated with HOMA-IR was in AKR1C2, a gene involved in aldehyde and ketone metabolic pathways.
Conclusion: We identified several potential genetic determinants of metabolic traits in Samoans, a population at high risk for T2D, through GWASs of fasting glucose, fasting insulin, and HOMA-IR. While the CREBRF finding is concordant with prior research, the others require further investigation. The findings from this study may shed light on the etiology of metabolic disorders and highlight the importance of including underrepresented groups in biomedical research.
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