PLoS ONE (Jan 2011)

TCF7L2 polymorphism, weight loss and proinsulin:insulin ratio in the diabetes prevention program.

  • Jeanne M McCaffery,
  • Kathleen A Jablonski,
  • Paul W Franks,
  • Sam Dagogo-Jack,
  • Rena R Wing,
  • William C Knowler,
  • Linda Delahanty,
  • Dana Dabelea,
  • Richard Hamman,
  • Alan R Shuldiner,
  • Jose C Florez,
  • Diabetes Prevention Program Research Group

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0021518
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 6, no. 7
p. e21518

Abstract

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TCF7L2 variants have been associated with type 2 diabetes, body mass index (BMI), and deficits in proinsulin processing and insulin secretion. Here we sought to test whether these effects were apparent in high-risk individuals and modify treatment responses.We examined the potential role of the TCF7L2 rs7903146 variant in predicting resistance to weight loss or a lack of improvement of proinsulin processing during 2.5-years of follow-up participants (N = 2,994) from the Diabetes Prevention Program (DPP), a randomized controlled trial designed to prevent or delay diabetes in high-risk adults.We observed no difference in the degree of weight loss by rs7903146 genotypes. However, the T allele (conferring higher risk of diabetes) at rs7903146 was associated with higher fasting proinsulin at baseline (P<0.001), higher baseline proinsulin:insulin ratio (p<0.0001) and increased proinsulin:insulin ratio over a median of 2.5 years of follow-up (P = 0.003). Effects were comparable across treatment arms.The combination of a lack of impact of the TCF7L2 genotypes on the ability to lose weight, but the presence of a consistent effect on the proinsulin:insulin ratio over the course of DPP, suggests that high-risk genotype carriers at this locus can successfully lose weight to counter diabetes risk despite persistent deficits in insulin production.