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. 2009 Feb;58(2):505-10.
doi: 10.2337/db08-0906. Epub 2008 Dec 3.

Adiposity-related heterogeneity in patterns of type 2 diabetes susceptibility observed in genome-wide association data

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Adiposity-related heterogeneity in patterns of type 2 diabetes susceptibility observed in genome-wide association data

Nicholas J Timpson et al. Diabetes. 2009 Feb.

Abstract

Objective: This study examined how differences in the BMI distribution of type 2 diabetic case subjects affected genome-wide patterns of type 2 diabetes association and considered the implications for the etiological heterogeneity of type 2 diabetes.

Research design and methods: We reanalyzed data from the Wellcome Trust Case Control Consortium genome-wide association scan (1,924 case subjects, 2,938 control subjects: 393,453 single-nucleotide polymorphisms [SNPs]) after stratifying case subjects (into "obese" and "nonobese") according to median BMI (30.2 kg/m(2)). Replication of signals in which alternative case-ascertainment strategies generated marked effect size heterogeneity in type 2 diabetes association signal was sought in additional samples.

Results: In the "obese-type 2 diabetes" scan, FTO variants had the strongest type 2 diabetes effect (rs8050136: relative risk [RR] 1.49 [95% CI 1.34-1.66], P = 1.3 x 10(-13)), with only weak evidence for TCF7L2 (rs7901695 RR 1.21 [1.09-1.35], P = 0.001). This situation was reversed in the "nonobese" scan, with FTO association undetectable (RR 1.07 [0.97-1.19], P = 0.19) and TCF7L2 predominant (RR 1.53 [1.37-1.71], P = 1.3 x 10(-14)). These patterns, confirmed by replication, generated strong combined evidence for between-stratum effect size heterogeneity (FTO: P(DIFF) = 1.4 x 10(-7); TCF7L2: P(DIFF) = 4.0 x 10(-6)). Other signals displaying evidence of effect size heterogeneity in the genome-wide analyses (on chromosomes 3, 12, 15, and 18) did not replicate. Analysis of the current list of type 2 diabetes susceptibility variants revealed nominal evidence for effect size heterogeneity for the SLC30A8 locus alone (RR(obese) 1.08 [1.01-1.15]; RR(nonobese) 1.18 [1.10-1.27]: P(DIFF) = 0.04).

Conclusions: This study demonstrates the impact of differences in case ascertainment on the power to detect and replicate genetic associations in genome-wide association studies. These data reinforce the notion that there is substantial etiological heterogeneity within type 2 diabetes.

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Figures

FIG. 1.
FIG. 1.
Genome-wide association results for the “obese” and “nonobese” type 2 diabetes scans. A: Genome-wide type 2 diabetes association results for nonobese scan sample design. B: Genome-wide type 2 diabetes association results for obese scan sample design. The four loci labeled were those associated with type 2 diabetes in the overall scan for which stratification effects appeared most marked. (Please see http://dx.doi.org/10.2337/db08-0906 for a high-quality digital representation of this figure.)

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