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Renin–angiotensin–aldosterone system genotypes and haplotypes affect the susceptibility to nephropathy in type 2 diabetes patients
Author(s) -
Nabil Mtiraoui,
Intissar Ezzidi,
Amira Turki,
Molka Chaieb,
Touhami Mahjoub,
Wassim Y. Almawi
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
journal of the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.457
H-Index - 46
eISSN - 1752-8976
pISSN - 1470-3203
DOI - 10.1177/1470320310396542
Subject(s) - haplotype , diabetic nephropathy , genotype , medicine , genotyping , allele , microalbuminuria , nephropathy , diabetes mellitus , endocrinology , genetics , biology , gene
Background: The association between renin C-4063T and angiotensinogen (AGT) T174M, M235T, and A-6G polymorphisms with diabetic nephropathy (DN) was investigated in Tunisian type 2 diabetes (T2DM) patients. Methods: Study subjects comprised 917 T2DM patients (405 normoalbuminuric, 329 microalbuminuric and 185 macroalbuminuric). Genotyping was done by PCR-RFLP. Results: Renin C-4063T allele and genotype frequencies were comparable between DN cases and normoalbuminuric controls. Although AGT 235T and -6G allele, and 235T/T and -6G/G genotype frequencies were higher in DN compared to normoalbuminuric patients, they were comparable between microalbuminuric or macroalbuminuric patients. Three-locus AGT haplotype analysis (A-6G/T174M/M235T) identified DN-protective (ATM, AMM, GTM) and DN-susceptible (GTM, ATT, GMT and AMT) haplotypes, and demonstrated enrichment of GTT haplotype in macroalbuminuric compared to microalbuminuric or normoalbuminuric patients. Regression analysis confirmed negative (AMM) and positive (GTM, ATT, GMT, AMT) association of AGT haplotypes with microalbuminuria, and negative (AMM) and positive (GTM and ATT) association of AGT haplotypes with macroalbuminuria. None of the AGT haplotypes was associated with DN severity. Conclusions: Genetic variation at the AGT gene influences the risk of nephropathy in T2DM patients but not extent of DN severity, and thus represents a potential DN genetic susceptibility locus worthy of replication.

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