- Smith, Kirk;
- Deutsch, Aaron;
- McGrail, Carolyn;
- Kim, Hyunkyung;
- Hsu, Sarah;
- Huerta-Chagoya, Alicia;
- Mandla, Ravi;
- Schroeder, Philip;
- Westerman, Kenneth;
- Szczerbinski, Lukasz;
- Majarian, Timothy;
- Kaur, Varinderpal;
- Williamson, Alice;
- Zaitlen, Noah;
- Claussnitzer, Melina;
- Florez, Jose;
- Manning, Alisa;
- Mercader, Josep;
- Gaulton, Kyle;
- Udler, Miriam
Type 2 diabetes (T2D) is a multifactorial disease with substantial genetic risk, for which the underlying biological mechanisms are not fully understood. In this study, we identified multi-ancestry T2D genetic clusters by analyzing genetic data from diverse populations in 37 published T2D genome-wide association studies representing more than 1.4 million individuals. We implemented soft clustering with 650 T2D-associated genetic variants and 110 T2D-related traits, capturing known and novel T2D clusters with distinct cardiometabolic trait associations across two independent biobanks representing diverse genetic ancestral populations (African, n = 21,906; Admixed American, n = 14,410; East Asian, n =2,422; European, n = 90,093; and South Asian, n = 1,262). The 12 genetic clusters were enriched for specific single-cell regulatory regions. Several of the polygenic scores derived from the clusters differed in distribution among ancestry groups, including a significantly higher proportion of lipodystrophy-related polygenic risk in East Asian ancestry. T2D risk was equivalent at a body mass index (BMI) of 30 kg m-2 in the European subpopulation and 24.2 (22.9-25.5) kg m-2 in the East Asian subpopulation; after adjusting for cluster-specific genetic risk, the equivalent BMI threshold increased to 28.5 (27.1-30.0) kg m-2 in the East Asian group. Thus, these multi-ancestry T2D genetic clusters encompass a broader range of biological mechanisms and provide preliminary insights to explain ancestry-associated differences in T2D risk profiles.