Scientific Reports (May 2021)

Genetic factors affect the susceptibility to bacterial infections in diabetes

  • Johan R. Simonsen,
  • Annemari Käräjämäki,
  • Anni A. Antikainen,
  • Iiro Toppila,
  • Emma Ahlqvist,
  • Rashmi Prasad,
  • Dina Mansour-Aly,
  • Valma Harjutsalo,
  • Asko Järvinen,
  • Tiinamaija Tuomi,
  • Leif Groop,
  • Carol Forsblom,
  • Per-Henrik Groop,
  • Niina Sandholm,
  • Markku Lehto

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-88273-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Diabetes increases the risk of bacterial infections. We investigated whether common genetic variants associate with infection susceptibility in Finnish diabetic individuals. We performed genome-wide association studies and pathway analysis for bacterial infection frequency in Finnish adult diabetic individuals (FinnDiane Study; N = 5092, Diabetes Registry Vaasa; N = 4247) using national register data on antibiotic prescription purchases. Replication analyses were performed in a Swedish diabetic population (ANDIS; N = 9602) and in a Finnish non-diabetic population (FinnGen; N = 159,166). Genome-wide data indicated moderate but significant narrow-sense heritability for infection susceptibility (h2 = 16%, P = 0.02). Variants on chromosome 2 were associated with reduced infection susceptibility (rs62192851, P = 2.23 × 10–7). Homozygotic carriers of the rs62192851 effect allele (N = 44) had a 37% lower median annual antibiotic purchase rate, compared to homozygotic carriers of the reference allele (N = 4231): 0.38 [IQR 0.22–0.90] and 0.60 [0.30–1.20] respectively, P = 0.01). Variants rs6727834 and rs10188087, in linkage disequilibrium with rs62192851, replicated in the FinnGen-cohort (P < 0.05), but no variants replicated in the ANDIS-cohort. Pathway analysis suggested the IRAK1 mediated NF-κB activation through IKK complex recruitment-pathway to be a mediator of the phenotype. Common genetic variants on chromosome 2 may associate with reduced risk of bacterial infections in Finnish individuals with diabetes.