[PDF][PDF] An autosomal genomic scan for loci linked to type II diabetes mellitus and body-mass index in Pima Indians

RL Hanson, MG Ehm, DJ Pettitt, M Prochazka… - The American Journal of …, 1998 - cell.com
RL Hanson, MG Ehm, DJ Pettitt, M Prochazka, DB Thompson, D Timberlake, T Foroud…
The American Journal of Human Genetics, 1998cell.com
Genetic factors influence the development of type II diabetes mellitus, but genetic loci for the
most common forms of diabetes have not been identified. A genomic scan was conducted to
identify loci linked to diabetes and body-mass index (BMI) in Pima Indians, a Native
American population with a high prevalence of type II diabetes. Among 264 nuclear families
containing 966 siblings, 516 autosomal markers with a median distance between adjacent
markers of 6.4 cM were genotyped. Variance-components methods were used to test for …
Summary
Genetic factors influence the development of type II diabetes mellitus, but genetic loci for the most common forms of diabetes have not been identified. A genomic scan was conducted to identify loci linked to diabetes and body-mass index (BMI) in Pima Indians, a Native American population with a high prevalence of type II diabetes. Among 264 nuclear families containing 966 siblings, 516 autosomal markers with a median distance between adjacent markers of 6.4 cM were genotyped. Variance-components methods were used to test for linkage with an age-adjusted diabetes score and with BMI. In multipoint analyses, the strongest evidence for linkage with age-adjusted diabetes (LOD = 1.7) was on chromosome 11q, in the region that was also linked most strongly with BMI (LOD = 3.6). Bivariate linkage analyses strongly rejected both the null hypothesis of no linkage with either trait and the null hypothesis of no contribution of the locus to the covariation among the two traits. Sib-pair analyses suggest additional potential diabetes-susceptibility loci on chromosomes 1q and 7q.
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