A Genome-Wide Association Study of IVGTT-Based Measures of First Phase Insulin Secretion Refines the Underlying Physiology of Type 2 Diabetes Variants.
posted on 2025-07-31, 17:56authored byAR Wood, A Jonsson, AU Jackson, N Wang, N van Leewen, ND Palmer, S Kobes, J Deelen, L Boquete-Vilarino, J Paananen, A Stančáková, DI Boomsma, EJ de Geus, EM Eekhoff, A Fritsche, M Kramer, G Nijpels, A Simonis-Bik, TW van Haeften, A Mahajan, M Boehnke, RN Bergman, J Tuomilehto, FS Collins, KL Mohlke, K Banasik, CJ Groves, MI McCarthy, ER Pearson, A Natali, A Mari, TA Buchanan, KD Taylor, AH Xiang, AP Gjesing, N Grarup, H Eiberg, O Pedersen, Y-D Chen, M Laakso, JM Norris, U Smith, LE Wagenknecht, L Baier, DW Bowden, T Hansen, M Walker, RM Watanabe, LM 't Hart, RL Hanson, TM Frayling
Understanding the physiological mechanisms by which common variants predispose to type 2 diabetes requires large studies with detailed measures of insulin secretion and sensitivity. Here we performed the largest genome-wide association study of first phase insulin secretion, as measured by intravenous glucose tolerance tests, using up to 5,567 non-diabetic individuals from 10 studies. We aimed to refine the mechanisms of 178 known associations between common variants and glycaemic traits and identify new loci. Thirty type 2 diabetes, or fasting glucose raising, alleles were associated with a measure of first phase insulin secretion at P<0.05, and provided new evidence, or the strongest evidence yet, that insulin secretion, intrinsic to the islet cells, is a key mechanism underlying the associations at the HNF1A, IGFBP2, KCNQ1, HNF1B, VPS13C/C2CD4A, FAF1, PTPRD, AP3S2, KCNK16, MAEA, LPP, WFS1 and TMPRSS6 loci. The fasting glucose raising allele near PDX1, a known key insulin transcription factor, was strongly associated with lower first phase insulin secretion but has no evidence for an effect on type 2 diabetes risk. The diabetes risk allele at TCF7L2 was associated with a stronger effect on peak insulin response than on C-peptide-based insulin secretion rate, suggesting a possible additional role in hepatic insulin clearance or insulin processing. In summary, our study provides further insight into the mechanisms by which common genetic variation influences type 2 diabetes risk and glycaemic traits.
Published online
Journal Article
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from American Diabetes Association via the DOI in this record.