Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (diabetes)
277,896 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Affected-sib-pair analyses were performed using 104 Caucasian families to map genes that predispose to insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM). We have obtained linkage evidence for D6S446 (maximum lod score [MLS] = 2.8) and for D6S264 (MLS = 2.0) on 6q25-q27. Together with a previously reported data set, linkage can be firmly established (MLS = 3.4 for D6S264), and the disease locus has been designated IDDM8. With analysis of independent families, we confirmed linkage evidence for the previously identified IDDM3 (15q) and DDM7 (2q). We also typed additional markers in the regions containing IDDM3, IDDM4, IDDM5, and IDDM8. Preliminary linkage evidence for a novel region on chromosome 4q (D4S1566) has been found in 47 Florida families (P < .03). We also found evidence of linkage for two regions previously identified as potential linkages in the Florida subset: D3S1303 on 3q (P < .04) and D7S486 on 7q (P < .03). We could not confirm linkage with eight other regions (D1S191, D1S412, D4S1604, D8S264, D8S556, D10S193, D13S158, and D18S64) previously identified as potential linkages.
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PMID:Affected-sib-pair mapping of a novel susceptibility gene to insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM8) on chromosome 6q25-q27. 757 53

As a result of advances in technology, genome searches have been carried out for susceptibility genes for type 1 diabetes in humans and in the NOD mouse. These have shown that, in the NOD mouse, diabetes susceptibility is under the control of at least ten separate chromosomal loci. In the human, in addition to HLA and INS, two new susceptibility genes have been localized, IDDM4 on chromosome 11q and IDDM5 on 6q, demonstrating the polygenic nature of type 1 diabetes and the role of HLA as the major locus. Candidate genes at these loci are the subject of current investigation. Genetic and immunological markers of disease may be of value in screening the general population for individuals at risk of developing type 1 diabetes. The predictive power of different screening strategies should be tested in order to work out the potential value to the general population of preventive therapies that are now undergoing clinical trials in high risk 'pre-diabetics'. Type 2 diabetes is genetically heterogeneous, and, since 1992, two distinct genetic subtypes have been identified. The first is defined by mutations in the GCK gene, which cause up to 60% of cases of MODY. The second, designated MIDD (maternally inherited diabetes and deafness), is defined by mutation in the mitochondrial gene for tRNA(Leu(UUR)). MIDD patients are less obese than is usual for typical type 2 diabetes, may present in early adult life or occasionally in childhood and may have been diagnosed as having autoimmune type 1 diabetes, type 2 diabetes or MODY. Typically, patients with MIDD require insulin earlier than do type 2 diabetics without mitochondrial mutations. Genetically complex diseases, such as diabetes, hypertension, cancer and coronary heart disease, are common in most populations. The approaches to the genetic analysis of diabetes outlined in this review are likely to be useful to the genetic analysis of many of these disorders. Progress in this area will have important implications for public health strategies in the next decade and beyond.
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PMID:Molecular genetics of diabetes mellitus. 757 35

We have searched the human genome for genes that predispose to type 1 (insulin-dependent) diabetes mellitus using semi-automated fluorescence-based technology and linkage analysis. In addition to IDDM1 (in the major histocompatibility complex on chromosome 6p21) and IDDM2 (in the insulin gene region on chromosome 11p15), eighteen different chromosome regions showed some positive evidence of linkage to disease. Linkages to chromosomes 11q (IDDM4) and 6q (IDDM5) were confirmed by replication, and chromosome 18 may encode a fifth disease locus. There are probably no genes with large effects aside from IDDM1. Therefore polygenic inheritance is indicated, with a major locus at the major histocompatibility complex.
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PMID:A genome-wide search for human type 1 diabetes susceptibility genes. 807 38

Previous genome-wide mapping studies have provided suggestive linkage evidence for several novel susceptibility loci responsible for insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM); however, the evidence was not sufficient to confirm the existence of these genes. We analyzed 265 Caucasian families with IDDM and report the first evidence that meets the standard for confirmed linkage for three susceptibility loci. The maximum LOD scores (MLS) were 3.9, 4.5 and 3.6 in our data set, and 5.0, 4.6 and 5.0 for our data combined with non-overlapping data from the literature, for IDDM4 on chromosome 11q13, IDDM5 on 6q25, and IDDM8 on 6q27, respectively. However, we could not confirm linkage for IDDM3 on 15q26 and IDDM7 on 2q31-q33, or linkage disequilibrium between D2S152 and IDDM7.
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PMID:Confirmation of three susceptibility genes to insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus: IDDM4, IDDM5 and IDDM8. 873 39

Linkage studies have led to the identification of several chromosome regions that may contain susceptibility loci to type I diabetes (IDDM), in addition to the HLA and INS loci. These include two on chromosome 6q, denoted IDDM5 and IDDM8, that are not linked to HLA. In a previous study, we noticed that the evidence for linkage to IDDM susceptibility around the HLA locus extended over a total distance of 100 cM, which suggested to us that another susceptibility locus could reside near HLA. We developed a statistical method to test this hypothesis in a panel of 523 multiplex families from France, the United States, and Denmark (a total of 667 affected sib pairs, 536 with both parents genotyped), and here present evidence (P = .00003) of a susceptibility locus for IDDM located 32 cM from HLA in males but not linked to HLA in females and distinct from IDDM5 and IDDM8. A new statistical method to test for the presence of a second susceptibility locus linked to a known first susceptibility locus (here HLA) is presented. In addition, we analyzed our current family panel with markers for IDDM5 and IDDM8 on chromosome 6 and found suggestions of linkage for both of these loci (P = .002 and .004, respectively, on the complete family panel). When cumulated with previously published results, with overlapping families removed, the affected-sib-pair tests had a significance of P = .0001 for IDDM5 and P = .00004 for IDDM8.
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PMID:Evidence of a non-MHC susceptibility locus in type I diabetes linked to HLA on chromosome 6. 898 61

We have developed software and statistical tools for linkage analysis of polygenic diseases. We use type I diabetes mellitus (insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, IDDM) as our model system. Two susceptibility loci (IDDM1 on 6p21 and IDDM2 on 11p15) are well established, and recent genome searches suggest the existence of other susceptibility loci. We have implemented CASPAR, a software tool that makes it possible to test for linkage quickly and efficiently using multiple polymorphic DNA markers simultaneously in nuclear families consisting of two unaffected parents and a pair of affected siblings (ASP). We use a simulation-based method to determine whether lod scores from a collection of ASP tests are significant. We test our new software and statistical tools to assess linkage of IDDM5 and IDDM7 conditioned on analyses with 1 or 2 other unlinked type I diabetes susceptibility loci. The results from the CASPAR analysis suggest that conditioning of IDDM5 on IDDM1 and IDDM4, and of IDDM7 on IDDM1 and IDDM2 provides significant benefits for the genetic analysis of polygenic loci.
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PMID:Linkage analyses in type I diabetes mellitus using CASPAR, a software and statistical program for conditional analysis of polygenic diseases. 923 8

Continuing progress has been made in elucidating the genetic factors involved in type 1 diabetes (insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus [IDDM]) in the past year. Two genome scans suggested additional susceptibility intervals and provided supporting evidence for several previously reported linkages. Other studies focused on the confirmation of linkage using multipoint sibpair analyses with densely spaced markers and multiethnic collections of families. Although significant and consistent linkage evidence was reported for the susceptibility intervals IDDM8 (on human chromosome 6q27), IDDM4 (on 11q) and IDDM5 (on 6q25), evidence for most other intervals varies in different data sets -probably due to a weak effect of the disease genes, genetic heterogeneity or random variation. Linkage disequilibrium mapping has become an increasingly important tool for both the confirmation and fine-mapping of susceptibility intervals, as well as identification of etiological mutations. Functional studies indicate, firstly, that the susceptible and protective HLA class II molecules HLA-DR and -DQ bind and present nonoverlapping peptides and, secondly, that the variable number of tandem repeats at the 5' end of the insulin gene (susceptibility interval IDDM2) regulates insulin expression in the thymus.
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PMID:Genetic susceptibility factors in type 1 diabetes: linkage, disequilibrium and functional analyses. 991 16

The IDDM5 gene, which is identified by whole-genome searches, is located on chromosome 6q25. TAB2 (MAP3K7IP2 [mitogen-activating protein kinase kinase kinase 7 interacting protein 2]) is a potential candidate gene for type 1 diabetes because it is located on chromosome 6q25 and is involved in nuclear factor (NF)-kappaB regulation. We have conducted familial association studies using 478 families and demonstrate that a type 1 diabetes susceptibility gene resides within a 212-kb region containing the TAB2 gene (Tsp = 1.0 x 10(-2) to 4.0 x 10(-4)). No amino acid polymorphisms were detected in TAB2; however, multiple single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) found within 5' untranslated, 3' untranslated, and intron regions were associated with type 1 diabetes susceptibility. Two additional genes, LOC340152, a predicted gene with currently unknown function, and SMT3, which has homology to SUMO (small ubiquitin-related modifier) were found within the 212-kb region and were associated with type 1 diabetes susceptibility. Functional studies of the three genes will be required to determine their biological relevance to type 1 diabetes. However, both TAB2 and SUMO are involved in NF-kappaB activation and may thus be involved in type 1 diabetes through apoptosis in pancreatic beta-cells.
Diabetes 2004 Jul
PMID:A 212-kb region on chromosome 6q25 containing the TAB2 gene is associated with susceptibility to type 1 diabetes. 1522 Feb 15

Association studies are a potentially powerful approach to identifying susceptibility variants for common multifactorial diseases such as type 1 diabetes, but the results are not always consistently reproducible. The IDDM5 locus has recently been narrowed to an approximately 200-kb interval on chromosome 6q25 by two independent groups. These studies demonstrated that alleles at markers in the mitogen-activating protein kinase 7 interacting protein 2 (MAP3K7IP2)/SUMO4 region were associated with susceptibility to type 1 diabetes. Subsequent studies, however, showed inconsistency in the association of the SUMO4 gene with type 1 diabetes. To clarify the contribution of the M55V polymorphism of the SUMO4 gene to type 1 diabetes susceptibility, 541 type 1 diabetic patients and 768 control subjects were studied in Asian populations. The M55V polymorphism was significantly associated with type 1 diabetes in Asian populations (summary odds ratio [OR] 1.46, P = 0.00083, Mantel-Haenszel test). Meta-analysis of published studies and the present data confirmed a highly significant association in Asian populations (summary OR 1.29, P = 7.0 x 10(-6)) but indicated heterogeneity in the genetic effect of the SUMO4/MAP3K7IP2 locus on type 1 diabetes among diverse ethnic groups. These data indicate that the MAP3K7IP2/SUMO4 locus in the IDDM5 interval is associated with type 1 diabetes in Asian populations.
Diabetes 2005 Dec
PMID:Genetic heterogeneity in association of the SUMO4 M55V variant with susceptibility to type 1 diabetes. 1630 80

Small ubiquitin-related modifier (SUMO4), located in IDDM5, has been identified as a potential susceptibility gene for type 1 diabetes mellitus (T1DM). The novel polymorphism M55V, causing an amino acid change in the evolutionarily conserved met55 residue has been shown to activate the nuclear factor kappaB (NF-kappaB), hence the suspected role of SUMO4 in the pathogenicity of T1DM. The M55V polymorphism has been shown to be associated with susceptibility to T1DM in Asians, but not in Caucasians. Latent autoimmune diabetes in adults (LADA) is a slowly progressive form of T1DM and SUMO4 M55V has not been studied in LADA to date. The current study aims to test whether Latvians are similar to Caucasians in susceptibility to autoimmune diabetes (T1DM and LADA), with respect to SUMO4 M55V. We studied, age- and sex-matched, Latvian T1DM patients (n = 100) and healthy controls (n = 90) and LADA patients (n = 45) and healthy controls (n = 95). SUMO4 M55V polymorphism was analyzed using polymerase chain reaction (PCR)-restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP). The allelic frequencies of the A and G alleles were compared with HLA DR3-DR4-positive and HLA DR3-DR4-negative patients to identify any potential relation between HLA DR3-DR4 and SUMO4 M55V. We found no significant association between SUMO4 M55V and T1DM susceptibility in Latvians, the results being in concurrence with the previous studies in Caucasians of British and Canadian origin. Comparison of the A and G alleles with HLA DR3-DR4 did not result in any significant P values. No significant association was found between SUMO4 M55V and LADA. SUMO4 M55V is not associated with susceptibility to T1DM and LADA in Latvians, and Latvians exhibit similarity to other Caucasians with respect to association of SUMO4 M55V with autoimmune diabetes.
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PMID:Association of SUMO4 M55V polymorphism with autoimmune diabetes in Latvian patients. 1713 May 65


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