Heterogeneous effects on type 2 diabetes and cardiovascular outcomes of genetic variants and traits associated with fasting insulin.

Author:

Manning Alisa1ORCID,Sevilla-González Magdalena1ORCID,Smith Kirk1,Wang Ningyuan2,Jensen Aubrey3,Litkowski Elizabeth4,Kim Hyunkyung5,DiCorpo Daniel2,Westerman Kenneth1,Cui Jinrui6,Liu Ching-Ti2,Yu Chenglong7,McNeil John7ORCID,Lacaze Paul7ORCID,Chang Kyong-Mi8ORCID,Tsao Phil9ORCID,Phillips Lawrence10ORCID,Goodarzi Mark6ORCID,Sladek Rob11ORCID,Rotter Jerome12ORCID,Dupuis Josee13ORCID,Florez Jose1ORCID,Merino Jordi5,Meigs James14,Zhou Jin3,Raghavan Sridharan15,Udler MiriamORCID

Affiliation:

1. Massachusetts General Hospital

2. Boston University School of Public Health

3. University of California

4. Veterans Affairs Eastern Colorado Health Care System

5. The Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard

6. Cedars-Sinai Medical Center

7. Monash University

8. The Corporal Michael J. Crescenz Veterans Affairs Medical Center and University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine

9. Stanford University School of Medicine

10. Atlanta VA Medical Center

11. McGill University

12. The Lundquist Institute for Biomedical Innovation at Harbor-UCLA Medical Center

13. Boston University

14. Department of Medicine, Harvard Medical School

15. University of Colorado School of Medicine

Abstract

Abstract Hyperinsulinemia is a complex and heterogeneous phenotype that characterizes molecular alterations that precede the development of type 2 diabetes (T2D). It results from a complex combination of molecular processes, including insulin secretion and insulin sensitivity, that differ between individuals. To better understand the physiology of hyperinsulinemia and ultimately T2D, we implemented a genetic approach grouping fasting insulin (FI)-associated genetic variants based on their molecular and phenotypic similarities. We identified seven distinctive genetic clusters representing different physiologic mechanisms leading to rising FI levels, ranging from clusters of variants with effects on increased FI, but without increased risk of T2D (non-diabetogenic hyperinsulinemia), to clusters of variants that increase FI and T2D risk with demonstrated strong effects on body fat distribution, liver, lipid, and inflammatory processes (diabetogenic hyperinsulinemia). We generated cluster-specific polygenic scores in 1,104,258 individuals from five multi-ancestry cohorts to show that the clusters differed in associations with cardiometabolic traits. Among clusters characterized by non-diabetogenic hyperinsulinemia, there was both increased and decreased risk of coronary artery disease despite the non-increased risk of T2D. Similarly, the clusters characterized by diabetogenic hyperinsulinemia were associated with an increased risk of T2D, yet had differing risks of cardiovascular conditions, including coronary artery disease, myocardial infarction, and stroke. The strongest cluster-T2D associations were observed with the same direction of effect in non-Hispanic Black, Hispanic, non-Hispanic White, and non-Hispanic East Asian populations. These genetic clusters provide important insights into granular metabolic processes underlying the physiology of hyperinsulinemia, notably highlighting specific processes that decouple increasing FI levels from T2D and cardiovascular risk. Our findings suggest that increasing FI levels are not invariably associated with adverse cardiometabolic outcomes.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

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