This site contains online supplementary data for our manuscript,

Association Testing in 9,000 People Fails to Confirm the Association of the Insulin Receptor Substrate-1 G972R Polymorphism with Type 2 Diabetes

 By Jose C. Florez 1,2,3,4, Marketa Sjögren 5, Noël Burtt 3, Marju Orho-Melander 5, Steve Schayer 3, Maria Sun 1,3, Peter Almgren 5, Ulf Lindblad 6, Tiinamaija Tuomi 7, Daniel Gaudet 8, Thomas J. Hudson 9, Mark J. Daly 3, Kristin G. Ardlie 10, Joel N. Hirschhorn 3,11,12, David Altshuler 1,2,3,4,11 (*) and Leif Groop 5 (*)

1 Department of Molecular Biology and 2 Diabetes Unit, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts; 3 Program in Medical and Population Genetics, Broad Institute of Harvard and MIT, Cambridge, Massachusetts; Departments of 4 Medicine and 11 Genetics, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts; Departments of 5 Endocrinology and 6 Community Medicine, University Hospital MAS, Lund University, Malmö, Sweden; 7 Department of Medicine, Helsinki University Central Hospital; Folkhalsan Genetic Institute, Folkhalsan Research Center; and Research Program for Molecular Medicine, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland; 8 University of Montreal Community Genomic Center, Chicoutimi Hospital, Quebec, Canada; 9 McGill University and Genome Quebec Innovation Centre, Montreal, Canada; 10 Genomics Collaborative, Inc., Cambridge, Massachusetts; and 12 Divisions of Genetics and Endocrinology, Children’s Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts

(*) These authors jointly supervised the project

 Diabetes. 2004 Dec;53(12):3313-8.

 

 Online supplementary information: Genotype counts at the IRS1 G972R locus for the various samples tested in this study.  Refer to Table 1 in the published manuscript for a phenotypic description of each sample.