Abstract Text |
Type 2 diabetes (T2D) is prevalent in the Independent State of Samoa in Polynesia with an age standardized prevalence of 22.7% for men and 26.6% for women. Unique genetic factors may exist that contribute to this high prevalence. In addition, the effect of genes on susceptibility to T2D can differ between obese and lean cases. The Samoan population is genetically isolated, making it a prime candidate for genetics studies. We used whole genome sequence data generated through NHLBI’s TOPMed Program for 1,195 Samoans to create a Samoan specific reference panel to impute genotypes for an additional 1,897 Samoans. To identify genes and variants associated with T2D phenotypes, we completed genome wide association studies (GWAS) of (1) T2D, (2) T2D in obese (Polynesian cutoff of BMI≥32 kg/m2) and (3) T2D in nonobese with 9,609,170 sequenced and imputed variants, adjusting for age, sex, principal components of ancestry and empirical kinship (model 1). We also adjusted for BMI in model 2. In the T2D GWAS (n=478 cases, n=2,389 controls), a variant in a known T2D gene, PPARGC1A, was genome wide significant in both models 1 and 2 (p=1.30×10−8 and p=8.32×10−9, respectively). This variant is common both in other TOPMed populations (minor allele frequency (MAF)=0.376) and in Samoans (MAF=0.250). In the nonobese T2D GWAS (n=148 cases, n=1,119 controls), variants in or near three BMI associated genes were significantly associated with T2D in models 1 and 2 (in ADAM23, p=6.67×10−11 and p=2.08×10−11, respectively; near SATB2, p=1.37×10−10 and p=6.68×10−10; and near CREB1, p=1.17×10−9 and p=7.02×10−10), and a variant in MAP2, which has not been previously associated with T2D or related traits, was genome wide significant in models 1 and 2 (p=4.80×10−10 and p=5.22×10−11, respectively). These four variants are common in other TOPMed populations (MAF:0.094– 0.179), but rare in Samoans (MAF<0.009). In the obese T2D GWAS (n=330 cases, n=1,270 controls), no variants were genome wide significant. However, a suggestive (model 1: p=5.38×10−8) variant near known BMI gene TMEM182 is notable because this variant is rare in other TOPMed populations (MAF=0.0003), but common in Samoans (MAF=0.151). Additional exploration is necessary to further replicate these novel associations and characterize these variants. This highlights the importance of including diverse populations in genetics research to further characterize a map of disease associated variation.
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