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Insights from rare variants into the genetic architecture and biology of youth-onset type 2 diabetes.

Soo Heon KwakShylaja SrinivaLing ChenJennifer ToddJosep Maria MercaderElizabeth JensenJasmin DiversAmy MottlCatherine PihokerRachelle GandicaLori LaffelElvira IsganaitisMorey HaymondLynne LevitskyToni PollinJose C FlorezJason Flannick
Published in: Research square (2023)
Youth-onset type 2 diabetes (T2D) is a growing public health concern. Its genetic basis and relationship to other forms of diabetes are largely unknown. To gain insight into the genetic architecture and biology of youth-onset T2D, we analyzed exome sequences of 3,005 youth-onset T2D cases and 9,777 ancestry matched adult controls. We identified (a) monogenic diabetes variants in 2.1% of individuals; (b) two exome-wide significant ( P < 4.3×10 -7 ) common coding variant associations (in WFS1 and SLC30A8 ); (c) three exome-wide significant ( P < 2.5×10 -6 ) rare variant gene-level associations ( HNF1A , MC4R , ATX2NL ); and (d) rare variant association enrichments within 25 gene sets broadly related to obesity, monogenic diabetes, and β-cell function. Many association signals were shared between youth-onset and adult-onset T2D but had larger effects for youth-onset T2D risk (1.18-fold increase for common variants and 2.86-fold increase for rare variants). Both common and rare variant associations contributed more to youth-onset T2D liability variance than they did to adult-onset T2D, but the relative increase was larger for rare variant associations (5.0-fold) than for common variant associations (3.4-fold). Youth-onset T2D cases showed phenotypic differences depending on whether their genetic risk was driven by common variants (primarily related to insulin resistance) or rare variants (primarily related to β-cell dysfunction). These data paint a picture of youth-onset T2D as a disease genetically similar to both monogenic diabetes and adult-onset T2D, in which genetic heterogeneity might be used to sub-classify patients for different treatment strategies.
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