Genetic variability of procolipase associates with altered insulin secretion in non-diabetic Caucasians

Experimental and Clinical Endocrinology & Diabetes : Official Journal, German Society of Endocrinology [and] German Diabetes Association
P WeyrichH-U Häring

Abstract

Procolipase (CLPS) is secreted from the exocrine pancreas into the gastrointestinal tract and becomes proteolytically cleaved into colipase and the pentapeptide enterostatin. While colipase is an indispensable cofactor for pancreatic lipase, enterostatin acts as a hormone that inhibits insulin secretion and confers satiety signals to the brain, thereby restricting further food intake in animal models. As both high fat diet and obesity contribute to insulin resistance, we investigated whether genetic variability of CLPS associates with metabolic traits in non-diabetic humans at diabetes risk. Tagging single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the human CLPS locus on chr6p21.1 were selected using HapMap data. 498 humans, phenotyped for different glucose and lipid metabolic traits, were genotyped by bidirectional sequencing and multivariate linear regression analyses were undertaken. 2 tagging SNPs (rs3748050 in the Kozak sequence: A/G and rs3748051 in intron 1: A/G), covering 100% of CLPS variability including 8 kb of its promoter, were genotyped for association analyses. The minor alleles of both tagging SNPs associated significantly with a reduced insulin secretion (-20.2%, both SNPs) in various estimation models derived from th...Continue Reading

Citations

Aug 19, 2015·Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America·Lining GuoC Thomas Caskey

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