International Journal of Endocrinology (Jan 2023)

Adiponectin Gene Polymorphisms and Possible Susceptibility to Metabolic Syndrome among the Sudanese Population: A Case-Control Study

  • Altaf S. Mosad,
  • Ghada A. Elfadil,
  • Alsadig Gassoum,
  • Khanssa M. Elamin,
  • Nazik Elmalaika Obaid Seid Ahmed Husain

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1155/2023/5527963
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2023

Abstract

Read online

Background and Aim. The adiponectin gene (ADIPQ) has been identified as a human adiposity marker of metabolic syndrome (MetS) in several ethnic cultures. This study aimed to determine the allelic genotypes and haplotypes distribution of the ADIPQ gene polymorphisms and its association with body mass index (BMI), waist circumference (WC), glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c), and lipid profile in MetS adult Sudanese patients. Methodology. Four hundred and twenty middle-aged adults participated in this community-based case-control research. BMI (kg/m2) and blood pressure (BP) were measured. HbA1c (%) and lipid profile evaluation was performed on fasting blood samples. The guanidine extraction procedure was used to extract genomic DNA from EDTA whole blood by using polymerase chain reaction-restriction fragment length polymorphism (PCR-RFLP); samples were genotyped for the polymorphisms (rs266729), (rs2241766), and (rs1501299). Results. There is a significant difference in genotypic frequencies of the rs266729, rs2241766, and rs1501299 SNPs and allele frequencies P G, +45T > G, and +276G > T, were shown to report 1.788-, 1.622,- and 1.641-fold risks toward MetS susceptibility in Sudanese’s population, respectively. Conclusion. Along with clinical and biochemical signs, the ADIPOQ gene’s genetic variants (rs266729, rs2241766, and rs1501299), CTT, CGG, and GTG haplotypes are connected to the MetS risk among the Sudanese population.