| Literature DB >> 33352682 |
Susanne Jäger1,2, Rafael Cuadrat1,2, Clemens Wittenbecher1,2,3, Anna Floegel4, Per Hoffmann5,6, Cornelia Prehn7, Jerzy Adamski2,7,8,9, Tobias Pischon10,11,12, Matthias B Schulze1,2,13.
Abstract
Circulating levels of branched-chain amino acids, glycine, or aromatic amino acids have been associated with risk of type 2 diabetes. However, whether those associations reflect causal relationships or are rather driven by early processes of disease development is unclear. We selected diabetes-related amino acid ratios based on metabolic network structures and investigated causal effects of these ratios and single amino acids on the risk of type 2 diabetes in two-sample Mendelian randomization studies. Selection of genetic instruments for amino acid traits relied on genome-wide association studies in a representative sub-cohort (up to 2265 participants) of the European Prospective Investigation into Cancer and Nutrition (EPIC)-Potsdam Study and public data from genome-wide association studies on single amino acids. For the selected instruments, outcome associations were drawn from the DIAGRAM (DIAbetes Genetics Replication And Meta-analysis, 74,124 cases and 824,006 controls) consortium. Mendelian randomization results indicate an inverse association for a per standard deviation increase in ln-transformed tyrosine/methionine ratio with type 2 diabetes (OR = 0.87 (0.81-0.93)). Multivariable Mendelian randomization revealed inverse association for higher log10-transformed tyrosine levels with type 2 diabetes (OR = 0.19 (0.04-0.88)), independent of other amino acids. Tyrosine might be a causal trait for type 2 diabetes independent of other diabetes-associated amino acids.Entities:
Keywords: GWAS; Mendelian randomization; amino acids; type 2 diabetes; tyrosine
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33352682 PMCID: PMC7766372 DOI: 10.3390/nu12123890
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nutrients ISSN: 2072-6643 Impact factor: 5.717