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APOE polymorphisms and the development of diabetic nephropathy in type 1 diabetes: results of case-control and family-based studies.

  1. S Araki,
  2. D K Moczulski,
  3. L Hanna,
  4. L J Scott,
  5. J H Warram and
  6. A S Krolewski
  1. Joslin Diabetes Center, Department of Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02215, USA.

    Abstract

    The goal of this study was to examine the association between known polymorphisms in the apolipoprotein E gene (APOE) and diabetic nephropathy (DN) in type 1 diabetes. We used both a case-control comparison and a family-based study design known as the transmission/disequilibrium test (TDT). For the case-control comparison, we collected DNA from 223 subjects with clinically diagnosed DN and 196 control subjects with normoalbuminuria and long-duration type 1 diabetes (> or = 15 years). For the family-based study, we obtained DNA from both parents of 154 DN subjects and 81 control subjects. The frequency of the epsilon2 allele of exon 4 of APOE was significantly higher in DN subjects than in control subjects. The risk of DN was 3.1 times higher (95% CI 1.6-5.9) in carriers of this allele than in noncarriers. In the family study, heterozygous parents for the E2 allele preferentially transmitted epsilon2 to DN offspring (64 vs. 36%, P < 0.03). Four additional polymorphisms (i.e., -491 A/T, -219 G/T, IE1 G/C, and APOCI insertion/deletion [I/D]) that flank the APOE locus were not associated with DN in either the case-control comparison or in the family-based study. In conclusion, the results of the case-control as well as the family-based study provide evidence that the epsilon2 allele of APOE increases the risk of DN in type 1 diabetes. The molecular mechanisms underlying this risk are unclear at present.

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