Fine-scale haplotype mapping of MUT, AACS, SLC6A15 and PRKCA genes indicates association with insulin resistance of metabolic syndrome and relationship with branched chain amino acid metabolism or regulation

Author

Haydar, Sara

Grigorescu, Florin

Vintila, Madalina

Cogne, Yannick

Lautier, Corinne

Tutuncu, Yildiz

Brun, Jean Frederic

Robine, Jean Marie

Pugeat, Michel

Normand, Christophe

Poucheret, Patrick

Gheorghiu, Monica

Georgescu, Carmen

Badiu, Corin

Băculescu, Nicoleta

Renard, Eric

Ylli, Dorina

Badiou, Stephanie

Sutra, Thibault

Cristol, Jean Paul

Mercier, Jacques

Gomis, Ramon

Macias Solé, Josep Maria

Litvinov, Serghey

Khusnutdinova, Elza

Poiana, Catalina

Pasquali, Renato

Lauro, Davide

Sesti, Giorgio

Prudente, Sabrina

Trischitta, Vincenzo

Tsatsoulis, Agathocles

Abdelhak, Sonia

Barakat, Abdelhamid

Zenati, Akila

Ylli, Agron

Satman, Ilhan

Kanninen, Timo

Rinato, Yves

Missoni, Sasa

Publication date

2019-03-26



Abstract

Branched chain amino acids (BCAA) are essential elements of the human diet, which display increased plasma levels in obesity and regained particular interest as potential biomarkers for development of diabetes. To define determinants of insulin resistance (IR) we investigated 73 genes involved in BCAA metabolism or regulation by fine-scale haplotype mapping in two European populations with metabolic syndrome. French and Romanians (n = 465) were genotyped for SNPs (Affymetrix) and enriched by imputation (BEAGLE 4.1) at 1000 genome project density. Initial association hits detected by sliding window were refined (HAPLOVIEW 3.1 and PHASE 2.1) and correlated to homeostasis model assessment (HOMAIR) index, in vivo insulin sensitivity (SI) and BCAA plasma levels (ANOVA). Four genomic regions were associated with IR located downstream of MUT, AACS, SLC6A15 and PRKCA genes (P between 9.3 and 3.7 x 10−5). Inferred haplotypes up to 13 SNPs length were associated with IR (e.g. MUT gene with P < 4.9 x 10−5; Bonferroni 1.3 x 10−3) and synergistic to HOMAIR. SNPs in the same regions were also associated with one order of magnitude lower P values (e.g. rs20167284 in the MUT gene with P < 1.27 x 10−4) and replicated in Mediterranean samples (n = 832). In French, influential haplotypes (OR > 2.0) were correlated with in vivo insulin sensitivity (1/SI) except for SLC6A15 gene. Association of these genes with BCAA levels was variable, but influential haplotypes confirmed implication of MUT from BCAA metabolism as well as a role of regulatory genes (AACS and PRKCA) and suggested potential changes in transcriptional activity. These data drive attention towards new regulatory regions involved in IR in relation with BCAA and show the ability of haplotypes in phased DNA to detect signals complimentary to SNPs, which may be useful in designing genetic markers for clinical applications in ethnic populations.

Document Type

Article
Published version

Language

English

CDU Subject

61 - Medical sciences

Subject

Insulinoresistència; Obesitat

Pages

23 p.

Publisher

PLoS ONE

Version of

Haydar S, Grigorescu F, Vintilă M, Cogne Y, Lautier C, Tutuncu Y, et al. (2019) Fine-scale haplotype mapping of MUT, AACS, SLC6A15 and PRKCA genes indicates association with insulin resistance of metabolic syndrome and relationship with branched chain amino acid metabolism or regulation. PLoS ONE 14(3): e0214122. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0214122

Documents

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Rights

© 2019 Haydar et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.