Variants in Hepatocyte Nuclear Factor 4α Are Modestly Associated With Type 2 Diabetes in Pima Indians

  1. Yunhua Li Muller1,
  2. Aniello M. Infante1,
  3. Robert L. Hanson1,
  4. Latisha Love-Gregory2,
  5. William Knowler1,
  6. Clifton Bogardus1 and
  7. Leslie J. Baier1
  1. 1Phoenix Epidemiology and Clinical Research Branch, National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Disease, National Institutes of Health, Phoenix, Arizona
  2. 2Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri
  1. Address correspondence and reprint requests to Leslie Baier, PhD, Clinical Diabetes and Nutrition Section, NIDDK, NIH, 4212 N. 16th St., Phoenix, AZ 85016. E-mail: lbaier{at}phx.niddk.nih.gov

Abstract

Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) within the hepatocyte nuclear factor 4α (HNF4α) gene are associated with type 2 diabetes in Finns and Ashkenazi Jews. Previous studies in both populations have reported linkage to type 2 diabetes near the HNF4α locus on chromosome 20q12-13. To investigate whether HNF4α is a diabetes susceptibility gene in Pima Indians, a population with the highest reported prevalence of type 2 diabetes but with no evidence for linkage of the disease on chromosome 20q, 19 SNPs across the promoter and coding region of HNF4α were genotyped for association analysis. In a group of 1,037 Pima Indians (573 diabetic and 464 nondiabetic subjects), three SNPs in HNF4α (rs3212183 and rs2071197 located in introns 3 and 1, respectively, and rs6031558, an extremely rare SNP located in the P2 promoter region) were modestly associated with type 2 diabetes (rs3212183 odds ratio [OR] 1.34 [95% CI 1.07–1.67], P = 0.009; rs2071197 1.34 [1.07–1.66], P = 0.008; and rs6031558 3.18 [1.03–9.84], P = 0.04, adjusted for age, sex, birth year, heritage, and family membership). We conclude that variants in HNF4α do not appear to be major determinants for type 2 diabetes in Pima Indians; however, HNF4α may have a minor role in type 2 diabetes susceptibility within this Native American population.

Footnotes

    • Accepted July 12, 2005.
    • Received January 3, 2005.
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