Association of genetic variation in FTO with risk of obesity and type 2 diabetes with data from 96,551 East and South Asians

Li, H. ; Kilpeläinen, T. O. ; Liu, C. ; Zhu, J. ; Liu, Y. ; Hu, C. ; Yang, Z. ; Zhang, W. ; Bao, W. ; Cha, S. ; Wu, Y. ; Yang, T. ; Sekine, A. ; Choi, B. Y. ; Yajnik, C. S. ; Zhou, D. ; Takeuchi, F. ; Yamamoto, K. ; Chan, J. C. ; Mani, K. R. ; Been, L. F. ; Imamura, M. ; Nakashima, E. ; Lee, N. ; Fujisawa, T. ; Karasawa, S. ; Wen, W. ; Joglekar, C. V. ; Lu, W. ; Chang, Y. ; Xiang, Y. ; Gao, Y. ; Liu, S. ; Song, Y. ; Kwak, S. H. ; Shin, H. D. ; Park, K. S. ; Fall, C. H. D. ; Kim, J. Y. ; Sham, P. C. ; Lam, K. S. L. ; Zheng, W. ; Shu, X. ; Deng, H. ; Ikegami, H. ; Krishnaveni, G. V. ; Sanghera, D. K. ; Chuang, L. ; Liu, L. ; Hu, R. ; Kim, Y. ; Daimon, M. ; Hotta, K. ; Jia, W. ; Kooner, J. S. ; Chambers, J. C. ; Chandak, G. R. ; Ma, R. C. ; Maeda, S. ; Dorajoo, R. ; Yokota, M. ; Takayanagi, R. ; Kato, N. ; Lin, X. ; Loos, R. J. F. (2012) Association of genetic variation in FTO with risk of obesity and type 2 diabetes with data from 96,551 East and South Asians Diabetologia, 55 (4). pp. 981-995. ISSN 0012-186X

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Official URL: http://doi.org/10.1007/s00125-011-2370-7

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00125-011-2370-7

Abstract

Aims/hypothesis FTO harbours the strongest known obesity-susceptibility locus in Europeans. While there is growing evidence for a role for FTO in obesity risk in Asians, its association with type 2 diabetes, independently of BMI, remains inconsistent. To test whether there is an association of the FTO locus with obesity and type 2 diabetes, we conducted a meta-analysis of 32 populations including 96,551 East and South Asians. Methods All studies published on the association between FTO-rs9939609 (or proxy [r 2 > 0.98]) and BMI, obesity or type 2 diabetes in East or South Asians were invited. Each study group analysed their data according to a standardised analysis plan. Association with type 2 diabetes was also adjusted for BMI. Random-effects meta-analyses were performed to pool all effect sizes. Results The FTO-rs9939609 minor allele increased risk of obesity by 1.25-fold/allele (p = 9.0 × 10−19), overweight by 1.13-fold/allele (p = 1.0 × 10−11) and type 2 diabetes by 1.15-fold/allele (p = 5.5 × 10−8). The association with type 2 diabetes was attenuated after adjustment for BMI (OR 1.10-fold/allele, p = 6.6 × 10−5). The FTO-rs9939609 minor allele increased BMI by 0.26 kg/m2 per allele (p = 2.8 × 10−17), WHR by 0.003/allele (p = 1.2 × 10−6), and body fat percentage by 0.31%/allele (p = 0.0005). Associations were similar using dominant models. While the minor allele is less common in East Asians (12–20%) than South Asians (30–33%), the effect of FTO variation on obesity-related traits and type 2 diabetes was similar in the two populations. Conclusions/interpretation FTO is associated with increased risk of obesity and type 2 diabetes, with effect sizes similar in East and South Asians and similar to those observed in Europeans. Furthermore, FTO is also associated with type 2 diabetes independently of BMI.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to Springer Nature Switzerland AG.
Keywords:Asians; FTO; Meta-Analysis; Obesity; Type 2 Diabetes.
ID Code:116954
Deposited On:15 Apr 2021 05:49
Last Modified:06 Feb 2023 10:25

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