Evaluating the distinct pleiotropic effects of omega-3 fatty acids on type 2 diabetes mellitus: a mendelian randomization study

Author:

Hu Chunyan,Zhou Yulin,Wu Xueyan,Jia Xiaojing,Zhu Yuanyue,Zheng Ruizhi,Wang Shuangyuan,Lin Lin,Qi Hongyan,Lin Hong,Li Mian,Wang Tiange,Zhao Zhiyun,Xu Min,Xu Yu,Chen Yuhong,Ning Guang,Borges Maria-Carolina,Wang Weiqing,Zheng Jie,Bi Yufang,Lu JieliORCID

Abstract

Abstract Background Observational studies and conventional Mendelian randomization (MR) studies showed inconclusive evidence to support the association between omega-3 fatty acids and type 2 diabetes. We aim to evaluate the causal effect of omega-3 fatty acids on type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), and the distinct intermediate phenotypes linking the two. Methods Two-sample MR was performed using genetic instruments derived from a recent genome-wide association study (GWAS) of omega-3 fatty acids (N = 114,999) from UK Biobank and outcome data obtained from a large-scale T2DM GWAS (62,892 cases and 596,424 controls) in European ancestry. MR-Clust was applied to determine clustered genetic instruments of omega-3 fatty acids that influences T2DM. Two-step MR analysis was used to identify potential intermediate phenotypes (e.g. glycemic traits) that linking omega-3 fatty acids with T2DM. Results Univariate MR showed heterogenous effect of omega-3 fatty acids on T2DM. At least two pleiotropic effects between omega-3 fatty acids and T2DM were identified using MR-Clust. For cluster 1 with seven instruments, increasing omega-3 fatty acids reduced T2DM risk (OR: 0.52, 95%CI 0.45–0.59), and decreased HOMA-IR (β = − 0.13, SE = 0.05, P = 0.02). On the contrary, MR analysis using 10 instruments in cluster 2 showed that increasing omega-3 fatty acids increased T2DM risk (OR:1.10; 95%CI 1.06–1.15), and decreased HOMA-B (β = − 0.04, SE = 0.01, P = 4.52 × 10–5). Two-step MR indicated that increasing omega-3 fatty acid levels decreased T2DM risk via decreasing HOMA-IR in cluster 1, while increased T2DM risk via decreasing HOMA-B in cluster 2. Conclusions This study provides evidence to support two distinct pleiotropic effects of omega-3 fatty acids on T2DM risk influenced by different gene clusters, which could be partially explained by distinct effects of omega-3 fatty acids on insulin resistance and beta cell dysfunction. The pleiotropic feature of omega-3 fatty acids variants and its complex relationships with T2DM need to be carefully considered in future genetic and clinical studies.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Shanghai Outstanding Academic Leaders Plan

Shanghai Medical and Health Development Foundation

Clinical Research Plan of SHDC

Science and Technology Committee of Shanghai

Heart and Stroke Foundation of British Columbia and Yukon

UK Medical Research Council Skills Development Fellowship

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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