Publication | Open Access
Common Single Nucleotide Polymorphisms in <i>TCF7L2</i> Are Reproducibly Associated With Type 2 Diabetes and Reduce the Insulin Response to Glucose in Nondiabetic Individuals
372
Citations
21
References
2006
Year
GeneticsGenetic EpidemiologyHuman PolymorphismMolecular GeneticsInsulin SignalingMetabolic SyndromeDiabetes EpidemiologyNondiabetic IndividualsPublic HealthMetabolic SignalingType 2Statistical GeneticsGenetic FactorDiabetes ComplicationsTcf7l2 SnpsTcf7l2 GeneInsulin ResponseEpidemiologyInsulin ResistanceGenetic DeterminantDiabetesDiabetes MellitusSystems BiologyMedicine
Recently, common noncoding variants in the TCF7L2 gene were strongly associated with increased risk of type 2 diabetes in samples from Iceland, Denmark, and the U.S. We genotyped 13 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) across TCF7L2 in 8,310 individuals in family-based and case-control designs from Scandinavia, Poland, and the U.S. We convincingly confirmed the previous association of TCF7L2 SNPs with the risk of type 2 diabetes (rs7903146T odds ratio 1.40 [95% CI 1.30-1.50], P = 6.74 x 10(-20)). In nondiabetic individuals, the risk genotypes were associated with a substantial reduction in the insulinogenic index derived from an oral glucose tolerance test (risk allele homozygotes have half the insulin response to glucose of noncarriers, P = 0.003) but not with increased insulin resistance. These results suggest that TCF7L2 variants may act through insulin secretion to increase the risk of type 2 diabetes.
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