Abstract

Melatonin regulates the mammalian circadian rhythm and plays metabolic functions such as glucose homeostasis. Both melatonin receptors (MTNR1A and MTNR1B, encoded by the MTNR1A and MTNR1B genes, respectively) are expressed in pancreatic beta cells and mediate the glucometabolic roles of melatonin as well as insulin secretion. The MTNR1B gene is a well-known genetic risk factor in type 2 diabetes (T2D); however, little is known about the involvement of the MTNR1A gene in here T2D. We aimed to investigate whether MTNR1A is linked to and/or associated with familial T2D. We genotyped 14 single nucleotide polymorphisms within the MTNR1A gene in 212 peninsular Italian families with T2D. We performed parametric linkage and linkage disequilibrium analyses to investigate the role of MTNR1A variants in conferring T2D risk. We considered variants statistically significant if conferring linkage or linkage disequilibrium with p < 0.05. We found 3 novel variants (rs62350392, rs2119883, and rs13147179) significantly linked to and/or associated with T2D in multigenerational Italian families. This is the first study to report MTNR1A as a novel risk gene in T2D. Functional studies are needed to confirm these results.

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