196 research outputs found
Genome-Wide Association Study of Cryptosporidiosis in Infants Implicates PRKCA.
Diarrhea is a major cause of both morbidity and mortality worldwide, especially among young children. Cryptosporidiosis is a leading cause of diarrhea in children, particularly in South Asia and sub-Saharan Africa, where it is responsible for over 200,000 deaths per year. Beyond the initial clinical presentation of diarrhea, it is associated with long-term sequelae such as malnutrition and neurocognitive developmental deficits. Risk factors include poverty and overcrowding, and yet not all children with these risk factors and exposure are infected, nor do all infected children develop symptomatic disease. One potential risk factor to explain these differences is their human genome. To identify genetic variants associated with symptomatic cryptosporidiosis, we conducted a genome-wide association study (GWAS) examining 6.5 million single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in 873 children from three independent cohorts in Dhaka, Bangladesh, namely, the Dhaka Birth Cohort (DBC), the Performance of Rotavirus and Oral Polio Vaccines in Developing Countries (PROVIDE) study, and the Cryptosporidiosis Birth Cohort (CBC). Associations were estimated separately for each cohort under an additive model, adjusting for length-for-age Z-score at 12āmonths of age, the first two principal components to account for population substructure, and genotyping batch. The strongest meta-analytic association was with rs58296998 (Pā=ā3.73āĆā10-8), an intronic SNP and expression quantitative trait locus (eQTL) of protein kinase C alpha (PRKCA). Each additional risk allele conferred 2.4 times the odds of Cryptosporidium-associated diarrhea in the first year of life. This genetic association suggests a role for protein kinase C alpha in pediatric cryptosporidiosis and warrants further investigation.IMPORTANCE Globally, diarrhea remains one of the major causes of pediatric morbidity and mortality. The initial symptoms of diarrhea can often lead to long-term consequences for the health of young children, such as malnutrition and neurocognitive developmental deficits. Despite many children having similar exposures to infectious causes of diarrhea, not all develop symptomatic disease, indicating a possible role for human genetic variation. Here, we conducted a genetic study of susceptibility to symptomatic disease associated with Cryptosporidium infection (a leading cause of diarrhea) in three independent cohorts of infants from Dhaka, Bangladesh. We identified a genetic variant within protein kinase C alpha (PRKCA) associated with higher risk of cryptosporidiosis in the first year of life. These results indicate a role for human genetics in susceptibility to cryptosporidiosis and warrant further research to elucidate the mechanism
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The core clock gene, Bmal1, and its downstream target, the SNARE regulatory protein secretagogin, are necessary for circadian secretion of glucagon-like peptide-1.
OBJECTIVES:The incretin hormone glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) is secreted from intestinal L-cells upon nutrient intake. While recent evidence has shown that GLP-1 is released in a circadian manner in rats, whether this occurs in mice and if this pattern is regulated by the circadian clock remain to be elucidated. Furthermore, although circadian GLP-1 secretion parallels expression of the core clock gene Bmal1, the link between the two remains largely unknown. Secretagogin (Scgn) is an exocytotic SNARE regulatory protein that demonstrates circadian expression and is essential for insulin secretion from Ī²-cells. The objective of the current study was to establish the necessity of the core clock gene Bmal1 and the SNARE protein SCGN as essential regulators of circadian GLP-1 secretion. METHODS:Oral glucose tolerance tests were conducted at different times of the day on 4-hour fasted C57BL/6J, Bmal1 wild-type, and Bmal1 knockout mice. Mass spectrometry, RNA-seq, qRT-PCR and/or microarray analyses, and immunostaining were conducted on murine (m) and human (h) primary L-cells and mGLUTag and hNCI-H716 L-cell lines. At peak and trough GLP-1 secretory time points, the mGLUTag cells were co-stained for SCGN and a membrane-marker, ChIP was used to analyze BMAL1 binding sites in the Scgn promoter, protein interaction with SCGN was tested by co-immunoprecipitation, and siRNA was used to knockdown Scgn for GLP-1 secretion assay. RESULTS:C57BL/6J mice displayed a circadian rhythm in GLP-1 secretion that peaked at the onset of their feeding period. Rhythmic GLP-1 release was impaired in Bmal1 knockout (KO) mice as compared to wild-type controls at the peak (pĀ <Ā 0.05) but not at the trough secretory time point. Microarray identified SNARE and transport vesicle pathways as highly upregulated in mGLUTag L-cells at the peak time point of GLP-1 secretion (pĀ <Ā 0.001). Mass spectrometry revealed that SCGN was also increased at this time (pĀ <Ā 0.001), while RNA-seq, qRT-PCR, and immunostaining demonstrated Scgn expression in all human and murine primary L-cells and cell lines. The mGLUTag and hNCI-H716 L-cells exhibited circadian rhythms in Scgn expression (pĀ <Ā 0.001). The ChIP analysis demonstrated increased binding of BMAL1 only at the peak of Scgn expression (pĀ <Ā 0.01). Immunocytochemistry showed the translocation of SCGN to the cell membrane after stimulation at the peak time point only (pĀ <Ā 0.05), while CoIP showed that SCGN was pulled down with SNAP25 and Ī²-actin, but only the latter interaction was time-dependent (pĀ <Ā 0.05). Finally, Scgn siRNA-treated cells demonstrated significantly blunted GLP-1 secretion (pĀ <Ā 0.01) in response to stimulation at the peak time point only. CONCLUSIONS:These data demonstrate, for the first time, that mice display a circadian pattern in GLP-1 secretion, which is impaired in Bmal1 knockout mice, and that Bmal1 regulation of Scgn expression plays an essential role in the circadian release of the incretin hormone GLP-1
Fenofibrate-associated changes in renal function and relationship to clinical outcomes among individuals with type 2 diabetes: the Action to Control Cardiovascular Risk in Diabetes (ACCORD) experience
Fenofibrate has been noted to cause an elevation in serum creatinine in some individuals. Participants in the Action to Control Cardiovascular Risk in Diabetes Lipid Study were studied to better characterise who is at risk of an increase in creatinine level and to determine whether those with creatinine elevation have a differential risk of adverse renal or cardiovascular outcomes
Reversibility of Fenofibrate Therapy-Induced Renal Function Impairment in ACCORD Type 2 Diabetic Participants
OBJECTIVETo assess the reversibility of the elevation of serum creatinine levels in patients with diabetes after 5 years of continuous on-trial fenofibrate therapy.RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODSAn on-drug/off-drug ancillary study to the Action to Control Cardiovascular Risk in Diabetes (ACCORD) Lipid Trial to investigate posttrial changes in serum creatinine and cystatin C. Eligible participants were recruited into a prospective, nested, three-group study based on retrospective on-trial serum creatinine levels: fenofibrate case subjects (n = 321, ā„20% increase after 3 months of therapy); fenofibrate control subjects (n = 175, ā¤2% increase); and placebo control subjects (n = 565). Serum creatinine and cystatin C were measured at trial end and 6ā8 weeks after discontinuation of trial therapy.RESULTSAt trial end, case subjects had the highest adjusted serum creatinine (Ā± SE) mg/dL (1.11 Ā± 0.02) and the lowest adjusted estimated glomerular filtration rate (eGFR) (Ā± SE) mL/min/1.73 m2 (68.4 Ā± 1.0) versus control subjects (1.01 Ā± 0.02; 74.8 Ā± 1.3) and placebo subjects (0.98 Ā± 0.01; 77.8 Ā± 0.7). After 51 days off-drug, serum creatinine in case subjects was still higher (0.97 Ā± 0.02) and eGFR still lower (77.8 Ā± 1.0) than control subjects (0.90 Ā± 0.02; 81.8 Ā± 1.3) but not different from placebo subjects (0.99 Ā± 0.01; 76.6 Ā± 0.7). Changes in serum cystatin C recapitulated the serum creatinine changes.CONCLUSIONSParticipants with significant initial on-trial increases in serum creatinine (ā„20%) returned to the same level of renal function as participants receiving placebo while participants who had ā¤2% increase in serum creatinine had net preservation of renal function compared with the same unselected placebo reference group. The fenofibrate-associated on-trial increases in serum creatinine were reversible, and the reversal was complete after 51 days off-drug. The similarity of the cystatin C results suggests that the mechanism of this change is not specific for serum creatinine
T1DBase: integration and presentation of complex data for type 1 diabetes research
T1DBase () [Smink et al. (2005) Nucleic Acids Res., 33, D544āD549; Burren et al. (2004) Hum. Genomics, 1, 98ā109] is a public website and database that supports the type 1 diabetes (T1D) research community. T1DBase provides a consolidated T1D-oriented view of the complex data world that now confronts medical researchers and enables scientists to navigate from information they know to information that is new to them. Overview pages for genes and markers summarize information for these elements. The Gene Dossier summarizes information for a list of genes. GBrowse [Stein et al. (2002) Genome Res., 10, 1599ā1610] displays genes and other features in their genomic context, and Cytoscape [Shannon et al. (2003) Genome Res., 13, 2498ā2504] shows genes in the context of interacting proteins and genes. The Beta Cell Gene Atlas shows gene expression in Ī² cells, islets, and related cell types and lines, and the Tissue Expression Viewer shows expression across other tissues. The Microarray Viewer shows expression from more than 20 array experiments. The Beta Cell Gene Expression Bank contains manually curated gene and pathway annotations for genes expressed in Ī² cells. T1DMart is a query tool for markers and genotypes. PosterPages are āhome pagesā about specific topics or datasets. The key challenge, now and in the future, is to provide powerful informatics capabilities to T1D scientists in a form they can use to enhance their research
HLA genotyping in the international Type 1 Diabetes Genetics Consortium
Background Although human leukocyte antigen (HLA) DQ and
DR loci appear to confer the strongest genetic risk for
type 1 diabetes, more detailed information is required for other loci within the
HLA region to understand causality and stratify additional risk factors. The
Type 1 Diabetes Genetics Consortium (T1DGC) study design included
high-resolution genotyping of HLA-A, B,
C, DRB1, DQ, and
DP loci in all affected sibling pair and trio families, and
cases and controls, recruited from four networks worldwide, for analysis with
clinical phenotypes and immunological markers
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