Family studies of non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus in South Indians

McCarthy, M. I. ; Hitman, G. A. ; Shields, D. C. ; Morton, N. E. ; Snehalatha, C. ; Mohan, V. ; Ramachandran, A. ; Viswanathan , M. (1994) Family studies of non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus in South Indians Diabetologia, 37 (12). pp. 1221-1230. ISSN 0012-186X

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Official URL: http://www.springerlink.com/content/xp816154522460...

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/BF00399796

Abstract

Though a genetic basis for non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) is clear, the likely mode of inheritance is not known. The segregation of NIDDM was studied in 64 nuclear South Indian pedigrees (449 individuals) ascertained through an affected proband having both parents and more than 1 sibling alive and available for oral glucose tolerance testing. A high proportion of parents were found to be of abnormal glucose tolerance [89 of 128 (70%) diabetic and 11 of 128 (9%) impaired]. Complex segregation analysis was performed using (1) POINTER which implements the mixed model and distinguishes major gene, multifactorial and nontransmitted environmental contributions to affection and (2) COMDS which implements an oligogenic model with major gene, modifier gene and environmental contributions to a) affection and b) diathesis (an ordered polychotomy amongst non-affected family members, based on 2-h plasma glucose level). Using POINTER, there was no formal support for a major gene and the most parsimonious solutions were achieved with multifactorial models. Using COMDS, we found i) significant improvements in models when information on glucose levels in non-diabetic family members (diathesis) was included, ii) support for segregation of a diallelic gene as well as background familial resemblance, and iii) under the best-supported model, this diallelic locus featured incomplete dominance (d=0.8) and a disease-predisposing allele frequency of 14%. In South Indians, segregation of NIDDM is inadequately described by simple major gene models: more complex models provide more satisfactory descriptions. This finding, if applicable in other populations, has important implications for the search for diabetes-susceptibility genes.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to Springer.
Keywords:Non-insulin-dependent Diabetes Mellitus; Segregation Analysis; South India; Family Studies; Polygenes; Major Gene; Heritability; Diathesis
ID Code:80301
Deposited On:31 Jan 2012 11:21
Last Modified:31 Jan 2012 11:21

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