| Literature DB >> 29061729 |
Jill M Norris1, Hye-Seung Lee2, Brittni Frederiksen3, Iris Erlund4, Ulla Uusitalo2, Jimin Yang2, Åke Lernmark5, Olli Simell6, Jorma Toppari6,7, Marian Rewers8, Anette-G Ziegler9, Jin-Xiong She10, Suna Onengut-Gumuscu11, Wei-Min Chen11, Stephen S Rich11, Jouko Sundvall4, Beena Akolkar12, Jeffrey Krischer2, Suvi M Virtanen13, William Hagopian14.
Abstract
We examined the association between plasma 25-hydroxyvitamin D [25(OH)D] concentration and islet autoimmunity (IA) and whether vitamin D gene polymorphisms modify the effect of 25(OH)D on IA risk. We followed 8,676 children at increased genetic risk of type 1 diabetes at six sites in the U.S. and Europe. We defined IA as positivity for at least one autoantibody (GADA, IAA, or IA-2A) on two or more visits. We conducted a risk set sampled nested case-control study of 376 IA case subjects and up to 3 control subjects per case subject. 25(OH)D concentration was measured on all samples prior to, and including, the first IA positive visit. Nine polymorphisms in VDR, CYP24A, CYP27B1, GC, and RXRA were analyzed as effect modifiers of 25(OH)D. Adjusting for HLA-DR-DQ and ancestry, higher childhood 25(OH)D was associated with lower IA risk (odds ratio = 0.93 for a 5 nmol/L difference; 95% CI 0.89, 0.97). Moreover, this association was modified by VDR rs7975232 (interaction P = 0.0072), where increased childhood 25(OH)D was associated with a decreasing IA risk based upon number of minor alleles: 0 (1.00; 0.93, 1.07), 1 (0.92; 0.89, 0.96), and 2 (0.86; 0.80, 0.92). Vitamin D and VDR may have a combined role in IA development in children at increased genetic risk for type 1 diabetes.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29061729 PMCID: PMC5741144 DOI: 10.2337/db17-0802
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetes ISSN: 0012-1797 Impact factor: 9.337