Disease areas:
  • nutrition and metabolism
Last updated:
Author(s):
Hassan S. Dashti, Céline Vetter, Jacqueline M. Lane, Matt C. Smith, Andrew R. Wood, Michael N. Weedon, Martin K. Rutter, Marta Garaulet, Frank A.J.L. Scheer, Richa Saxena
Publish date:
22 November 2019
Journal:
Diabetes
PubMed ID:
31757795

Abstract

Night shift work, behavioral rhythms, and the common MTNR1B risk single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP), rs10830963, associate with type 2 diabetes; however, whether they exert joint effects to exacerbate type 2 diabetes risk is unknown. Among employed participants of European ancestry in the UK Biobank (N = 189,488), we aimed to test the cross-sectional independent associations and joint interaction effects of these risk factors on odds of type 2 diabetes (n = 5,042 cases) and HbA1c levels (n = 175,156). Current shift work, definite morning or evening preference, and MTNR1B rs10830963 risk allele associated with type 2 diabetes and HbA1c levels. The effect of rs10830963 was not modified by shift work schedules. While marginal evidence of interaction between self-reported morningness-eveningness preference and rs10830963 on risk of type 2 diabetes was seen, this interaction did not persist when analysis was expanded to include all participants regardless of employment status and when accelerometer-derived sleep midpoint was used as an objective measure of morningness-eveningness preference. Our findings suggest that MTNR1B risk allele carriers who carry out shift work or have more extreme morningness-eveningness preference may not have enhanced risk of type 2 diabetes.

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Institution:
University of Manchester, Great Britain

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