Common variants in genes encoding adiponectin (ADIPOQ) and its receptors (ADIPOR1/2), adiponectin concentrations, and diabetes incidence in the Diabetes Prevention Program

Publication Description
Aims: Baseline adiponectin concentrations predict incident Type 2 diabetes mellitus in the Diabetes Prevention Program. We tested the hypothesis that common variants in the genes encoding adiponectin (ADIPOQ) and its receptors (ADIPOR1, ADIPOR2) would associate with circulating adiponectin concentrations and/or with diabetes incidence in the Diabetes Prevention Program population. Methods: Seventy-seven tagging single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in ADIPOQ (24), ADIPOR1 (22) and ADIPOR2 (31) were genotyped. Associations of SNPs with baseline adiponectin concentrations were evaluated using linear modelling. Associations of SNPs with diabetes incidence were evaluated using Cox proportional hazards modelling. Results: Thirteen of 24 ADIPOQ SNPs were significantly associated with baseline adiponectin concentrations. Multivariable analysis including these 13 SNPs revealed strong independent contributions from rs17366568, rs1648707, rs17373414 and rs1403696 with adiponectin concentrations. However, no ADIPOQ SNPs were directly associated with diabetes incidence. Two ADIPOR1 SNPs (rs1342387 and rs12733285) were associated with approximately 18% increased diabetes incidence for carriers of the minor allele without differences across treatment groups, and without any relationship with adiponectin concentrations. Conclusions: ADIPOQ SNPs are significantly associated with adiponectin concentrations in the Diabetes Prevention Program cohort. This observation extends prior observations from unselected populations of European descent into a broader multi-ethnic population, and confirms the relevance of these variants in an obese/dysglycaemic population. Despite the robust relationship between adiponectin concentrations and diabetes risk in this cohort, variants in ADIPOQ that relate to adiponectin concentrations do not relate to diabetes risk in this population. ADIPOR1 variants exerted significant effects on diabetes risk distinct from any effect of adiponectin concentrations. (c) 2012 The Authors. Diabetic Medicine (c) 2012 Diabetes UK.

Primary Author
Mather,K. J.
Christophi,C. A.
Jablonski,K. A.
Knowler,W. C.
Goldberg,R. B.
Kahn,S. E.
Spector,T.
Dastani,Z.
Waterworth,D.
Richards,J. B.
Funahashi,T.
Pi-Sunyer,F. X.
Pollin,T. I.
Florez,J. C.
Franks,P. W.
for the Diabetes Prevention Program Research Group

Author Address
Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism, Indiana University, Indianapolis, IN The Biostatistics Center, The George Washington University, Rockville, MD Diabetes Epidemiology and Clinical Research Section, National Institute of Diabetes and Dige(TRUNCATED)

Volume
29

Issue
12

Start Page
1579

Other Pages
1588

Publisher
Diabetes UK

Author Address
Division of Endocrinology and Metabolism, Indiana University, Indianapolis, IN The Biostatistics Center, The George Washington University, Rockville, MD Diabetes Epidemiology and Clinical Research Section, National Institute of Diabetes and Dige(TRUNCATED)

URL
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1464-5491.2012.03662.x/pdf

PMID
22443353

PMCID
PMC3499646



Reference Type
Journal Article

Periodical Full
Diabetic medicine : a journal of the British Diabetic Association

Publication Year
2012

ISSN/ISBN
1464-5491

Document Object Index
10.1111/j.1464-5491.2012.03662.x

Accession Number
j.1464-5491.2012.03662.x