Recently, hepatocyte nuclear factor-1
α (HNF-1
α, which is encoded by the
TCF1 gene) mutations were reported in a subset of patients with maturity onset diabetes of the young (MODY3). We studied the contribution
of
TCF1 to genetic susceptibility to common non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (type 2) in Japanese subjects by investigating
allelic association with type 2 diabetes use of three markers. We also studied the frequency of the G191D mutation, the only
mutation of
TCF1 reported so far in late-onset type 2 diabetes. A total of 356 subjects were studied. There were no significant differences
in allele frequency of the three markers between patients with type 2 diabetes and control subjects. A G191D mutation was
not found in the subjects studied, giving a frequency of less than 0.4% in common type 2 diabetes. The lack of association
of type 2 diabetes with three markers in and near
TCF1 suggests that mutations in
TCF1 derived from a limited number of founders are not a major cause of common type 2 diabetes even in the genetically homogeneous
Japanese population. The data also indicate that the G191D mutation in
TCF1 plays little, if any, role in susceptibility to common type 2 diabetes in the Japanese.
Key words Non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus - MODY - Hepatocyte nuclear factor-1α - Genetics - Microsatellite polymorphism
Received: 28 March 1998 / Accepted in revised form: 24 June 1998