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Mitochondrial DNA Backgrounds Might Modulate Diabetes Complications Rather than T2DM as a Whole

Authors :
Antonio Ceriello
Roberto Testa
Maria Pala
Francesca Gandini
Liana Spazzafumo
Hovirag Lancioni
Maurizio Marra
Maria Nicola Gadaleta
Viola Grugni
Baharak Hooshiar Kashani
Valeria Carossa
Alessandro Achilli
Massimo Boemi
Antonio Torroni
Ivano Testa
Anna Olivieri
C. Sirolla
Aurelia Santoro
Ugo A. Perego
Anna Rita Bonfigli
Antonella Cormio
Ornella Semino
Vincenza Battaglia
Claudio Franceschi
Achilli A.
Olivieri A.
Pala M.
Hooshiar Kashani B.
Carossa V.
Perego U.A.
Gandini F.
Santoro A.
Battaglia V.
Grugni V.
Lancioni H.
Sirolla C.
Bonfigli A.R.
Cormio A.
Boemi M.
Testa I.
Semino O.
Ceriello A.
Spazzafumo L.
Gadaleta M.N.
Marra M.
Testa R.
Franceschi C.
Torroni A.
Source :
PLoS ONE, PLoS ONE, Vol 6, Iss 6, p e21029 (2011)
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
Public Library of Science (PLoS), 2011.

Abstract

Mitochondrial dysfunction has been implicated in rare and common forms of type 2 diabetes (T2DM). Additionally, rare mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) mutations have been shown to be causal for T2DM pathogenesis. So far, many studies have investigated the possibility that mtDNA variation might affect the risk of T2DM, however, when found, haplogroup association has been rarely replicated, even in related populations, possibly due to an inadequate level of haplogroup resolution. Effects of mtDNA variation on diabetes complications have also been proposed. However, additional studies evaluating the mitochondrial role on both T2DM and related complications are badly needed. To test the hypothesis of a mitochondrial genome effect on diabetes and its complications, we genotyped the mtDNAs of 466 T2DM patients and 438 controls from a regional population of central Italy (Marche). Based on the most updated mtDNA phylogeny, all 904 samples were classified into 57 different mitochondrial sub-haplogroups, thus reaching an unprecedented level of resolution. We then evaluated whether the susceptibility of developing T2DM or its complications differed among the identified haplogroups, considering also the potential effects of phenotypical and clinical variables. MtDNA backgrounds, even when based on a refined haplogroup classification, do not appear to play a role in developing T2DM despite a possible protective effect for the common European haplogroup H1, which harbors the G3010A transition in the MTRNR2 gene. In contrast, our data indicate that different mitochondrial haplogroups are significantly associated with an increased risk of specific diabetes complications: H (the most frequent European haplogroup) with retinopathy, H3 with neuropathy, U3 with nephropathy, and V with renal failure.

Details

ISSN :
19326203
Volume :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
PLoS ONE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2558228947446dac74bffb295ac54be3