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Insulin gene mutations resulting in early-onset diabetes: marked differences in clinical presentation, metabolic status, and pathogenic effect through endoplasmic reticulum retention

Authors :
Nasret Harun
Sabrina Fetita
Philippe Froguel
Jean François Gautier
Aurélie Dechaume
Pierre Jean Guillausseau
Trine Welløv Boesgaard
Oluf Pedersen
Albane Simon
Torben Hansen
Amélie Bonnefond
M Vaxillaire
Marie Virally
Andrei I. Tarasov
Gargi Meur
Michel Polak
Guy A. Rutter
Source :
Meur, G, Simon, A, Harun, N, Virally, M, Dechaume, A, Bonnefond, A, Fetita, S, Tarasov, A I, Guillausseau, P-J, Boesgaard, T W, Pedersen, O, Hansen, T, Polak, M, Gautier, J-F, Froguel, P, Rutter, G A & Vaxillaire, M 2010, ' Insulin gene mutations resulting in early-onset diabetes: marked differences in clinical presentation, metabolic status, and pathogenic effect through endoplasmic reticulum retention ', Diabetes, vol. 59, no. 3, pp. 653-61 . https://doi.org/10.2337/db09-1091, Diabetes
Publication Year :
2010

Abstract

OBJECTIVE Heterozygous mutations in the human preproinsulin (INS) gene are a cause of nonsyndromic neonatal or early-infancy diabetes. Here, we sought to identify INS mutations associated with maturity-onset diabetes of the young (MODY) or nonautoimmune diabetes in mid-adult life, and to explore the molecular mechanisms involved. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS The INS gene was sequenced in 16 French probands with unexplained MODY, 95 patients with nonautoimmune early-onset diabetes (diagnosed at RESULTS A novel coding mutation, L30M, potentially affecting insulin multimerization, was identified in five diabetic individuals (diabetes onset 17–36 years) in a single family. L30M preproinsulin-GFP fluorescence largely associated with the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) in MIN6 β-cells, and ER exit was inhibited by ∼50%. Two additional mutants, R55C (at the B/C junction) and R6H (in the signal peptide), were normally targeted to secretory granules, but nonetheless caused substantial ER stress. CONCLUSIONS We describe three INS mutations cosegregating with early-onset diabetes whose clinical presentation is compatible with MODY. These led to the production of (pre)proinsulin molecules with markedly different trafficking properties and effects on ER stress, demonstrating a range of molecular defects in the β-cell.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Meur, G, Simon, A, Harun, N, Virally, M, Dechaume, A, Bonnefond, A, Fetita, S, Tarasov, A I, Guillausseau, P-J, Boesgaard, T W, Pedersen, O, Hansen, T, Polak, M, Gautier, J-F, Froguel, P, Rutter, G A & Vaxillaire, M 2010, ' Insulin gene mutations resulting in early-onset diabetes: marked differences in clinical presentation, metabolic status, and pathogenic effect through endoplasmic reticulum retention ', Diabetes, vol. 59, no. 3, pp. 653-61 . https://doi.org/10.2337/db09-1091, Diabetes
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....8f7efe7a8a3de7b772518dfe3a182938