Genetic associations vary across the spectrum of fasting serum insulin: results from the European IDEFICS/I.Family children's cohort
Articolo
Data di Pubblicazione:
2023
Abstract:
neurodegenerative
disease. We previously observed a U-shaped association between fasting insulin in middle-aged women and
dementia up to 34 years later. In the present study, we performed genome-wide association (GWA) analyses for fasting serum
insulin in European children with a focus on variants associated with the tails of the insulin distribution.
Methods Genotyping was successful in 2825 children aged 2-14 years at the time of insulin measurement. Because insulin
levels vary during childhood, GWA analyses were based on age- and sex-specific z scores. Five percentile ranks of z-insulin
were selected and modelled using logistic regression, i.e. the 15th, 25th, 50th, 75th and 85th percentile ranks (P15-P85).
Additive genetic models were adjusted for age, sex, BMI, survey year, survey country and principal components derived
from genetic data to account for ethnic heterogeneity. Quantile regression was used to determine whether associations with
variants identified by GWA analyses differed across quantiles of log-insulin.
Results A variant in the SLC28A1 gene (rs2122859) was associated with the 85th percentile rank of the insulin z score (P85,
p value=3×10-8). Two variants associated with low z-insulin (P15, p value <5×10-6) were located on the RBFOX1 and
SH3RF3 genes. These genes have previously been associated with both metabolic traits and dementia phenotypes. While
variants associated with P50 showed stable associations across the insulin spectrum, we found that associations with variants
identified through GWA analyses of P15 and P85 varied across quantiles of log-insulin.
Conclusions/interpretation The above results support the notion of a shared genetic architecture for dementia and metabolic
traits. Our approach identified genetic variants that were associated with the tails of the insulin spectrum only. Because traditional
heritability estimates assume that genetic effects are constant throughout the phenotype distribution, the new findings
may have implications for understanding the discrepancy in heritability estimates from GWA and family studies and for the
study of U-shaped biomarker-disease associations.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
BMI; Biomarkers; Dementia; Genetics; Genome-wide association analysis; Insulin; Metabolic traits; Obesity; Quantile regression; SNP; Type 2 diabetes
Elenco autori:
Russo, Paola
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