Evaluation of a SNP map of 6q24–27 confirms diabetic nephropathy loci and identifies novel associations in type 2 diabetes patients with nephropathy from an African …

TS Leak, JC Mychaleckyj, SG Smith, KL Keene… - Human genetics, 2008 - Springer
TS Leak, JC Mychaleckyj, SG Smith, KL Keene, CJ Gordon, PJ Hicks, BI Freedman…
Human genetics, 2008Springer
Previously, we performed a genome scan for type 2 diabetes (T2DM) using 638 African-
American (AA) affected sibling pairs from 247 families; non-parametric linkage analysis
suggested evidence of linkage at 6q24–27 (LOD 2.26). To comprehensively evaluate this
region, we performed a two-stage association study by first constructing a SNP map of 754
SNPs selected from HapMap on the basis of linkage disequilibrium (LD) in 300 AAT2DM
end-stage renal disease (ESRD) subjects, 311 AA controls, 43 European American controls …
Abstract
Previously, we performed a genome scan for type 2 diabetes (T2DM) using 638 African-American (AA) affected sibling pairs from 247 families; non-parametric linkage analysis suggested evidence of linkage at 6q24–27 (LOD 2.26). To comprehensively evaluate this region, we performed a two-stage association study by first constructing a SNP map of 754 SNPs selected from HapMap on the basis of linkage disequilibrium (LD) in 300 AAT2DM end-stage renal disease (ESRD) subjects, 311 AA controls, 43 European American controls and 45 Yoruba Nigerian samples (Set 1). Replication analyses were conducted in an independent population of 283 AA T2DM-ESRD subjects and 282 AA controls (Set 2). In addition, we adjusted for the impact of admixture on association results by using ancestry informative markers (AIMs). In Stage 1, 137 (18.2%) SNPs showed nominal evidence of association (P < 0.05) in one or more of tests of association: allelic (n = 33), dominant (n = 36), additive (n = 29), or recessive (n = 34) genotypic models, and 2- (n = 47) and 3-SNP (n = 43) haplotypic analyses. These SNPs were selected for follow-up genotyping. Stage 2 analyses confirmed association with a predicted 2-SNP “risk” haplotype in the PARK2 gene. Also, two intergenic SNPs showed consistent genotypic association with T2DM-ESRD: rs12197043 and rs4897081. Combined analysis of all subjects from both stages revealed nominal associations with 17 SNPs within genes, including suggestive associations in ESR1 and PARK2. This study confirms known diabetic nephropathy loci and identifies potentially novel susceptibility variants located within 6q24–27 in AA.
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