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Association analyses of GIP and GIPR polymorphisms with traits of the metabolic syndrome

✍ Scribed by Inke Nitz; Eva Fisher; Cornelia Weikert; Barbara Burwinkel; Yun Li; Matthias Möhlig; Heiner Boeing; Stefan Schreiber; Jürgen Schrezenmeir; Frank Döring


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2007
Tongue
English
Weight
245 KB
Volume
51
Category
Article
ISSN
1613-4125

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✦ Synopsis


Abstract

Glucose‐dependent insulinotropic polypeptide (GIP) stimulates insulin release via interaction with its pancreatic receptor (GIP receptor (GIPR)). GIP also acts as vasoactive protein. To investigate whether variations in GIP and GIPR genes are associated with risk factors of the metabolic syndrome we sequenced gene regions and identified two coding SNPs (GIP Ser103Gly, GIPR Glu354Gln) and one splice site SNP (GIP rs2291726) in 47 subjects. Interestingly, in silico analyses revealed that splice site SNP rs2291726 results in a truncated protein and classified GIPR variant Glu354Gln as a functional amino acid change. Association analyses were performed in a case‐cohort study of incident cardiovascular disease (CVD) nested in the EPIC‐Potsdam cohort. No significant associations between incident CVD and GIP Ser103Gly and rs2291726 were found. For GIPR Glu354Gln, we obtained a nominal association of heterozygous minor allele carrier with CVD in a codominant model adjusted for BMI, sex, and age (OR: 0.67, CI: 0.50–0.91, p = 0.01) or additional covariates of CVD (OR: 0.72, CI: 0.52–0.97, p = 0.03). In conclusion, we identified a common splice site mutation (rs2291726) of the GIP gene which results in a truncated protein and provide preliminary evidence for an association of the heterozygous GIPR Glu354Gln genotype with CVD.


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