Lack of Association between the Tagging SNP A+930→G of SOCS3 and Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus: Meta-Analysis of Four Independent Study Populations
Antje Fischer-Rosinsky,
Eva Fisher,
Peter Kovacs,
Matthias Blüher,
Matthias Möhlig,
Andreas F H Pfeiffer,
Heiner Boeing and
Joachim Spranger
PLOS ONE, 2008, vol. 3, issue 12, 1-4
Abstract:
Background: The suppressor of cytokine signalling 3 (SOCS3) provides a link between cytokine action and their negative consequences on insulin signalling. Thus SOCS3 is a potential candidate gene for type 2 diabetes (T2DM). Methodology/Principal Findings: Based on HapMap we identified the polymorphism A+930→G (rs4969168) as a haplotype tagging SNP (htSNP) sufficiently covering the genetic variation of the whole gene. We therefore examined the association between rs4969168 within SOCS3 and T2DM in three independent study populations; one prospective case-cohort study and two cross-sectional study populations. Due to the low frequency of individuals being homozygous for the polymorphism a dominant model of inheritance was assumed. The case-cohort study with 2,957 individuals (764 of them with incident T2DM) showed no effect of the polymorphism on diabetes risk (hazard ratio (95%CI): 0.86 (0.66–1.13); p = 0.3). Within the MeSyBePo-study population 325 subjects had T2DM from a total of 1,897 individuals, while the second cross-sectional cohort included 851 cases of T2DM within a total of 1653 subjects. According to the results in the prospective study, no association with T2DM was found (odds ratio (95%CI): 0.78 (0.54–1.12) for MesyBepo and 1.13 (0.90–1.42) for the Leipzig study population). There was also no association with metabolic subtraits such as insulin sensitivity (p = 0.7), insulin secretion (p = 0.8) or the hyperbolic relation of both, the disposition index (p = 0.7). In addition, no evidence for interaction with BMI or sex was found. We subsequently performed a meta-analysis, additionally including the publicly available data from the T2DM-subcohort of the WTCCC (n = 4,855). The overall odds ratio within that meta-analysis was 0.96 (0.88–1.06). Conclusions/Significance: There is no strong effect of the common genetic variation within the SOCS3 gene on the development of T2DM.
Date: 2008
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:plo:pone00:0003852
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0003852
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