Advertisement

Analysis of Polymorphisms of the Interleukin-18 Gene in Type 1 Diabetes and Hardy-Weinberg Equilibrium Testing

  1. Jeffrey S. Szeszko,
  2. Joanna M.M. Howson,
  3. Jason D. Cooper,
  4. Neil M. Walker,
  5. Rebecca C.J. Twells,
  6. Helen E. Stevens,
  7. Sarah L. Nutland and
  8. John A. Todd
  1. From the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation/Wellcome Trust Diabetes and Inflammation Laboratory, Cambridge Institute for Medical Research, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, U.K
  1. Address correspondence and reprint requests to John A. Todd, University of Cambridge, Cambridge Institute for Medical Research, Wellcome Trust/MRC Building, Addenbrooke’s Hospital, Cambridge CB2 2XY, U.K. E-mail: john.todd{at}cimr.cam.ac.uk

Abstract

Recently, the interleukin-18 cytokine gene (IL18) was reported to be associated with type 1 diabetes. In the present report, we calculated that the reported genotypes of the two 5′ region/promoter single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), −607 (C→A) (rs1946518) and −137 (G→C) (rs187238), were not in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium (HWE). We therefore investigated the association of the −607 and −137 SNPs in a U.K. type 1 diabetic Caucasian case-control collection (1,560 case and 1,715 control subjects tested at −607 and 4,323 case and 4,610 control subjects tested at −137) as well as a type 1 diabetic Caucasian collection comprised of families of European ancestry (1,347 families tested at −137 and 1,356 families tested at −607). No evidence for association with type 1 diabetes was found, including for the −607 A/A and C/A genotypes. To evaluate whether common variation elsewhere in the gene was associated with disease susceptibility, we analyzed eight IL18 tag SNPs in a type 1 diabetic case-control collection (1,561 case and 1,721 control subjects). No evidence for association was obtained (P = 0.11). We conclude that common allelic variation in IL18 is unlikely to contribute substantially to type 1 diabetes susceptibility in the populations tested and recommend routine application of tests for HWE in population-based studies for genetic association.

Footnotes

| Table of Contents
Advertisement