@article{AgaBarfknechtHallahanGottmannetal.2020, author = {Aga-Barfknecht, Heja and Hallahan, Nicole and Gottmann, Pascal and J{\"a}hnert, Markus and Osburg, Sophie and Schulze, Gunnar and Kamitz, Anne and Arends, Danny and Brockmann, Gudrun and Schallschmidt, Tanja and Lebek, Sandra and Chadt, Alexandra and Al-Hasani, Hadi and Joost, Hans-Georg and Sch{\"u}rmann, Annette and Vogel, Heike}, title = {Identification of novel potential type 2 diabetes genes mediating beta-cell loss and hyperglycemia using positional cloning}, series = {Frontiers in genetics}, volume = {11}, journal = {Frontiers in genetics}, publisher = {Frontiers Media}, address = {Lausanne}, issn = {1664-8021}, doi = {10.3389/fgene.2020.567191}, pages = {11}, year = {2020}, abstract = {Type 2 diabetes (T2D) is a complex metabolic disease regulated by an interaction of genetic predisposition and environmental factors. To understand the genetic contribution in the development of diabetes, mice varying in their disease susceptibility were crossed with the obese and diabetes-prone New Zealand obese (NZO) mouse. Subsequent whole-genome sequence scans revealed one major quantitative trait loci (QTL),Nidd/DBAon chromosome 4, linked to elevated blood glucose and reduced plasma insulin and low levels of pancreatic insulin. Phenotypical characterization of congenic mice carrying 13.6 Mbp of the critical fragment of DBA mice displayed severe hyperglycemia and impaired glucose clearance at week 10, decreased glucose response in week 13, and loss of beta-cells and pancreatic insulin in week 16. To identify the responsible gene variant(s), further congenic mice were generated and phenotyped, which resulted in a fragment of 3.3 Mbp that was sufficient to induce hyperglycemia. By combining transcriptome analysis and haplotype mapping, the number of putative responsible variant(s) was narrowed from initial 284 to 18 genes, including gene models and non-coding RNAs. Consideration of haplotype blocks reduced the number of candidate genes to four (Kti12,Osbpl9,Ttc39a, andCalr4) as potential T2D candidates as they display a differential expression in pancreatic islets and/or sequence variation. In conclusion, the integration of comparative analysis of multiple inbred populations such as haplotype mapping, transcriptomics, and sequence data substantially improved the mapping resolution of the diabetes QTLNidd/DBA. Future studies are necessary to understand the exact role of the different candidates in beta-cell function and their contribution in maintaining glycemic control.}, language = {en} }