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Joint effect of insulin signaling genes on cardiovascular events and on whole body and endothelial insulin resistance

Authors :
Assunta Pandolfi
Carmine Zoccali
Massimiliano Copetti
Sara Di Silvestre
Agostino Consoli
Luana Mercuri
Roberto Baratta
Giovanni Tripepi
Belinda Spoto
Natalia Di Pietro
Sabrina Prudente
Fabio Pellegrini
Vincenzo Trischitta
Simonetta Bacci
Massimo Federici
Alessandra Testa
Stefano Rizza
Rosa Di Paola
Francesca Mallamaci
Eleonora Morini
Renato Lauro
Alessandro Doria
Yuan Yuan Zhang
Lucia Frittitta
Lorenzo Malatino
Source :
Atherosclerosis. 226:140-145
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
Elsevier BV, 2013.

Abstract

Insulin resistance (IR) and cardiovascular disease (CVD) share a common soil. We investigated the combined role of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) affecting insulin signaling (ENPP1 K121Q, rs1044498; IRS1 G972R, rs1801278; TRIB3 Q84R, rs2295490) on CVD, age at myocardial infarction (MI), in vivo insulin sensitivity and in vitro insulin-stimulated nitric oxide synthase (NOS) activity.1. We first studied, incident cardiovascular events (a composite endpoint comprising myocardial infarction-MI, stroke and cardiovascular death) in 733 patients (2186 person-years, 175 events). 2. In a replication attempt, age at MI was tested in 331 individuals. 3. OGTT-derived insulin sensitivity index (ISI) was assessed in 829 individuals with fasting glucose126 mg/dl. 4. NOS activity was measured in 40 strains of human vein endothelial cells (HUVECs).1. Risk variants jointly predicted cardiovascular events (HR = 1.181; p = 0.0009) and, when added to clinical risk factors, significantly improved survival C-statistics; they also allowed a significantly correct reclassification (by net reclassification index) in the whole sample (135/733 individuals) and, even more, in obese patients (116/204 individuals). 2. Risk variants were jointly associated with age at MI (p = 0.006). 3. A significant association was also observed with ISI (p = 0.02). 4. Finally, risk variants were jointly associated with insulin-stimulated NOS activity in HUVECs (p = 0.009).Insulin signaling genes variants jointly affect cardiovascular disease, very likely by promoting whole body and endothelium-specific insulin resistance. Further studies are needed to address whether their genotyping help identify very high-risk patients who need specific and/or more aggressive preventive strategies.

Details

ISSN :
00219150
Volume :
226
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Atherosclerosis
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2f48f0c3d64e25adf98dd4ff78fec844
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.atherosclerosis.2012.10.035