Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0011860 (type 2 diabetes)
57,723 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In searching for a genetic marker of type 2 diabetes we estimated the frequency of alleles of the Bgl II restriction fragment length polymorphism (RFLP) of the insulin receptor gene in a group of type II diabetic patients (n = 50), characterized by OGTT (glucose, insulin, C-peptide) and insulin receptor binding parameters. Leucocyte DNA was incubated with restriction endonuclease Bgl II and specific fragments were determined by Southern blot technique, using radioactive plasmid pINSR 13.1 as insulin receptor gene probe for hybridization. Insulin receptor numbers and receptor affinity were estimated by 125I-(Tyr-A-14)- insulin binding to red blood cells. Among control subjects the 20 kb fragment (allele Bgl II+) had a frequency of 0.21. In our group of diabetic patients this allele had a frequency of 0.10 (n.s., p greater than 0.05). In our study the insulin receptor genotype had no influence on body mass index, insulin and C-peptide during OGTT as well as insulin receptor binding data. So far, etiopathogenetic linkage between diabetes and insulin receptor variants (mutants) could unambiguously be proved in patients with extreme insulin resistance only. In our opinion, the estimation of the role of the gene as the reason underlying the disease inevitably requires the investigation of large families with multiple occurrence of type 2 diabetes.
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PMID:Restriction fragment length polymorphism of the insulin receptor gene, type 2 diabetes and insulin binding. 168 Jul 59

A cohort of 132 well-documented White Welsh non-insulin-dependent diabetic (NIDDM) subjects were genotyped for 5 restriction-fragment-length polymorphisms (RFLPs) at the insulin-receptor gene (IRG) locus and a polymorphic locus 5' to the insulin gene. There was no significant difference in RFLP frequencies between the NIDDM subjects and a group of 87 matched White control subjects. Paired haplotype analysis of the IRG RFLPs suggested a difference between NIDDM and control groups for the endonuclease combinations Bgl II-Rsa I and Bgl II-Xba I. Analysis of implied haplotypes defined by the endonucleases Bgl II, Rsa I, and Xba I revealed one haplotype to be more prevalent in the NIDDM group; whereas, another haplotype was associated with the control group (P less than 0.02). Subset analysis within the NIDDM cohort compared the metabolic response of NIDDM subjects with the differing IRG haplotypes to a standard meal tolerance test. Both groups showed equivalent basal and postprandial glucose excursions, but one group revealed a significantly exaggerated plasma insulin response compared with the other (P less than 0.05). This may reflect the influence of genetic variation at the IRG locus on insulin sensitivity in patients with NIDDM.
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PMID:Allelic variants at insulin-receptor and insulin gene loci and susceptibility to NIDDM in Welsh population. 197 26

We have analyzed five Mod-1 (malic enzyme) mutants at the molecular and biochemical level. Four of these mutants, three electrophoretic variants and one null mutant, were induced by ethylnitrosourea (ENU). Another null mutant was the result of a spontaneous mutation. All of these mutations were heritable in a Mendelian fashion and viable in the homozygous condition. Restriction endonuclease and Southern blot analysis revealed that the spontaneous null mutant possessed an altered restriction fragment banding pattern. All of the ENU-induced mutants possessed normal restriction fragment banding patterns. All 5 mutants produced normal levels of Mod-1-specific mRNA. Only the spontaneous null mutant produced mRNA with altered size, which was consistent with the altered DNA-banding pattern. MOD-1 enzyme activity levels were normal in the three ENU-induced mutants with altered electrophoretic mobility. Enzyme activity was significantly lower than normal in tissues from animals homozygous for the null alleles, however, using Western blot analysis, low but significant levels of MOD-1 protein in Mod-1 null homozygotes were detected.
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PMID:Biochemical and molecular analysis of spontaneous and induced mutations at the mouse Mod-1 locus. 215 87

Polymorphism of 5' portion of the human insulin gene was examined in 188 unrelated Japanese subjects (49 normal, 71 with IDDM, and 68 with NIDDM) using restriction endonuclease analysis. Restriction fragments were classified according to the insertion size: Class 1 (600 base pairs), Class 2 (1300 base pairs), and Class 3 (2000 base pairs). We found a very high frequency of Class 1 alleles (96.8%) and a low frequency of both Class 2 (0.8%) and Class 3 alleles (2.4%) and that approximately 94% of the genotypes were Class 1/Class 1 homozygote. In addition, there was no correlation of allelic or genotypic frequency with NIDDM or IDDM. We conclude that length polymorphism of the human insulin gene cannot be a useful marker for diabetes in Japanese.
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PMID:The polymorphism linked to the human insulin gene: its lack of association with either IDDM or NIDDM in Japanese. 353 29

Recently, a missense mutation replacing tryptophan with arginine at codon 64 of the beta 3-adrenergic receptor gene was shown to be associated with insulin resistance in nondiabetic subjects and to an earlier onset of NIDDM in Pima Indians. We studied whether the codon 64 amino acid polymorphism of the beta 3-adrenergic receptor gene in a cohort of young healthy Danes was associated with high birth weight, accelerated weight gain during childhood and adolescence, present obesity, or impaired insulin sensitivity. The protocol included 380 unrelated white subjects in whom insulin sensitivity and secretion were measured during a combined intravenous glucose and tolbutamide tolerance test. A number of biochemical and anthropometric characteristics were determined for each subject. The subjects were genotyped for the codon 64 polymorphism by applying polymerase chain reaction restriction fragment-length polymorphism screening with the use of endonuclease BstN1. The allelic frequency of the mutated allele was 7% (95% CI: 5-10%), and it was similar in obese and nonobese subjects. The beta 3-adrenergic receptor gene variant was not related to birth weight or weight gain during childhood or adolescence. In its heterozygous form, the gene variant was not associated with an altered insulin sensitivity index (SI) or other features of the insulin resistance syndrome (BMI, blood pressure, fasting serum lipid levels, or fasting serum fibrinolytic variables). Three homozygous carriers of the polymorphism were identified, and each had a significantly higher BMI (27.4 +/- 1.3 vs. 23.5 +/- 3.7 kg/m2 [mean +/- SD]; P = 0.032), lower SI [4.9 +/- 2.9 vs. 15.4 +/- 9.0 10(-5) x (min x pmol/l)-1; P = 0.013], and higher fasting serum C-peptide (730 +/- 155 vs. 471 +/- 158 pmol/l; P = 0.016) than the wild-type carriers. The homozygous carriers also had significantly higher levels of fasting serum triglyceride (P = 0.042) and serum LDL cholesterol (P = 0.013). When adjustments were made for age, sex, BMI, and VO2max in a multiple regression analysis, a significantly negative association was found between homozygosity for the codon 64 variant and the SI (P = 0.009). We conclude that in young healthy Danes, the homozygous form but not the heterozygous form of the codon 64 amino acid polymorphism of the beta 3-adrenergic receptor may be associated with obesity and, independent of BMI, with a low SI. Since only three homozygous carriers were identified among 380 subjects, the results must be interpreted with caution, and studies of larger population samples are needed.
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PMID:Insulin sensitivity and body weight changes in young white carriers of the codon 64 amino acid polymorphism of the beta 3-adrenergic receptor gene. 869 Jan 60

To examine the association between von Willebrand Factor (vWF) concentrations and features of the insulin resistance syndrome, 208 patients with Type 2 (non-insulin-dependent) diabetes (NIDDM) and 80 healthy controls were studied. A restriction fragment length polymorphism in exon 12 of the vWF gene, detected by Aat II endonuclease, was also examined. vWF concentrations were elevated in the patient group (patients 1.28 IU ml-1 vs controls 1.12 IU ml-1, p = 0.003). Genotype frequencies were in Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium and genotype did not relate to vWF levels: means (95% CI) were AA 1.29 (1.29-1.44) IU ml-1 n = 3; AG 1.28 (1.22-1.26) IU ml-1 n = 48; GG 1.29 (1.25-1.39) IU ml-1 n = 155. vWF correlated with age (r = 0.23 p < 0.0005), duration of diabetes (r = 0.23, p < 0.001), and fibrinogen (r = 0.22, p = 0.002) in the patient group, but was unrelated to blood lipids, HbA1C, body mass index, glucose, hypertension, and smoking. In a linear regression model, age and insulin remained as independent predictors of vWF levels, explaining 16% of inter-individual variance in the patient group. In conclusion, these findings show vWF concentrations are elevated in NIDDM and are weakly related to features of the insulin resistance syndrome. No relationship was demonstrated between the gene polymorphism studied and vWF concentrations in this group.
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PMID:Levels of von Willebrand factor, insulin resistance syndrome, and a common vWF gene polymorphism in non-insulin-dependent (type 2) diabetes mellitus. 886 46

Familial hypobetalipoproteinemia is an autosomal co-dominant disorder, which in a minority of cases is due to a truncation producing mutation in the apoB gene. We have identified an apoB mutation in a 40-year old hypobetalipoproteinemic man with Type II diabetes mellitus. Immunoblotting of plasma revealed a major band for apoB-100 and a minor band with estimated size between apoB-52 and apoB-55. The proband's 75-year old father with Type II diabetes and a non-diabetic daughter also possessed the truncated protein. Direct sequencing of the amplified fragment of genomic DNA revealed a C-->T transition at nt 7692 in exon 26 of the apoB gene. This substitution yielded a premature stop codon at residue 2495 and abolished a BsaI restriction endonuclease site. The identical mutation has been described previously; however, the genotypes and ancestors of the kindred were different, suggesting that the mutation may have occurred independently. The majority of apoB-55 was eluted as particles smaller than LDL-sized apoB-100, and floated mostly between the LDL and HDL density range. It is worth noting that despite the presence of Type II diabetes, both the proband and his father have very low plasma lipid levels and neither have any clinically manifest macrovascular complications.
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PMID:Diabetes mellitus in a new kindred with familial hypobetalipoproteinemia and an apolipoprotein B truncation (apoB-55). 954

The role of apolipoprotein E (apoE) genotypes in modulating plasma lipid and apolipoprotein levels was studied in 112 patients with Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) and 94 healthy individuals. ApoE genotypes were identified by PCR amplification and subsequent restriction endonuclease digestion. The apoE allele and genotype frequencies were similar in both the diabetic and control subjects. The apoE allele frequencies were found to be 74.3 for e3, 10.1 for e2, 15.6 for e4 in the diabetic group, and 68.1 for e3, 13.2 for e2 and 18.7 for e4 in the control group. Sex-specific genotypic distribution of apoE polymorphism did not differ between the study groups. To elucidate the association of apoE with lipid abnormalities with respect to gender, serum lipid and apolipoprotein levels were compared among apo e2 (e2/2 and e3/2), e3 (e3/3) and e4 (e4/3 and e4/4) groups of T2DM and control subjects. Apo e2 allele was found to be associated to triglycerides for both sexes, and associated to glucose, and BMI only in females. Subjects with e2 allele had higher levels of BMI, glucose and triglyceride in comparison to e3 and e4. Our data suggest that genetic variation at the apoE locus in Turkish subjects is a genetic factor that influences lipid levels. Further studies attempting to correlate apoE polymorphism with lipid profile in a large number of individuals would be helpful in establishing the true significance of this polymorphism in the Turkish population.
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PMID:Apolipoprotein E polymorphism in Turkish subjects with Type 2 diabetes mellitus: allele frequency and relation to serum lipid concentrations. 1629 48

This study examined a possible association of the G>C polymorphism at nucleotide -174 in the promoter region of the interleukin-6 (IL-6) gene (rs1800795) with the prevalence of diabetic complications in 235 patients with type 1 and 498 patients with type 2 diabetes. Genotyping was performed using polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and subsequent cleavage by Nla III restriction endonuclease. Analyzing all diabetic patients together demonstrated that 301 patients (41.1%) carried the GG genotype, 114 (15.6%) the CC genotype, and 318 (43.3%) were heterozygous for the GC genotype. However, there was no correlation of any of the genotypes with the prevalence of diabetic nephropathy or diabetic neuropathy, but subjects with the CC genotype had a significantly higher prevalence of diabetic retinopathy compared to patients with the GC and GG genotype (p=0.016). This association was mainly lost when a logistic regression model was adjusted for diabetes duration (p=0.07). Consistently, a weak but not significant association of the polymorphism with diabetic retinopathy was observed when type 1 and type 2 diabetic patients were analyzed separately (patients with type 1 diabetes: p=0.12; patients with type 2 diabetes: p=0.09). Analogically, no association of the polymorphism was found for diabetic nephropathy or diabetic neuropathy in these groups. In conclusion these data suggest no major influence of the -174G>C variant in the promoter region of the IL-6 gene on the development of microvascular complications in patients with diabetes.
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PMID:The -174G>C IL-6 gene promoter polymorphism and diabetic microvascular complications. 1914 96

Type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM) is by far the most common type of diabetes and is characterized by insulin resistance and altered insulin secretion. Some genes, such as the vitamin D receptor gene (VDR, NM_001017535; GI: 7421), involved in its metabolic pathway have been regarded as good candidates for T2DM. In this study, we investigated whether there was an association of VDR: g.59979G>T or c.1025-49G>T (ApaIG>T) and g.60058T>C or c.1056T>C (TaqIT>C) polymorphisms in the 3' untranslated region of VDR with T2DM in a Turkish population. We collected blood samples from 241 individuals (72 patients with T2DM and 169 healthy individuals), and their DNA was isolated. Polymorphisms of the VDR were analyzed by DNA amplification with polymerase chain reaction and endonuclease digestion with ApaI and TaqI. Body mass index was higher in T2DM patients than in control individuals. However, the frequency of g.59979TT genotype in T2DM patients was not significantly increased compared to healthy subjects (37.5% vs. 36.1%, respectively). Although the VDR g.60058CC genotype in T2DM patients (19.4%) was higher than that in healthy individuals (11.2%), there was no significant difference. In the same way, there was no difference between the groups in allele frequencies. In conclusion, our study did not provide evidence for the association of two examined VDR polymorphisms with T2DM in a Turkish population.
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PMID:Detection of VDR gene ApaI and TaqI polymorphisms in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus using PCR-RFLP method in a Turkish population. 1918 74


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