| Literature DB >> 22996131 |
Tomasz Klupa1, Jan Skupien, Maciej T Malecki.
Abstract
Monogenic diabetes constitutes a heterogeneous group of single gene disorders. The molecular background and clinical picture of many of these diseases have been described. While each of these forms is much less prevalent than multifactorial type 1 and type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), together they affect millions of patients worldwide. Genetic diagnosis, which has become widely available, is of great clinical importance for patients with single gene diabetes. It helps to fully understand the pathophysiology of the disease, tailor the optimal hypoglycemic treatment, and define the prognosis for the entire family. Monogenic diabetes forms can be divided into 2 large groups, resulting from impaired insulin secretion or from an abnormal response to insulin. There are several lessons we have been taught by single-gene diabetes. We learned that the gene responsible for the occurrence of diabetes can be identified if an appropriate search strategy is used. In addition, discoveries of genes responsible for monogenic disorders pointed to them as susceptibility candidates for T2DM. Moreover, establishing that some families of proteins or biological pathways, such as transcription factors or potassium channel subunits, are involved in monogenic diabetes sparked research on their involvement in multifactorial diabetes. Finally, the example of single gene diabetes, particularly HNF1A MODY and permanent neonatal diabetes associated with the KCNJ11 and ABCC8 genes, all efficiently controlled on sulfonylurea, inspires us to continue the efforts to tailor individual treatment for T2DM patients. In this review paper, we summarize the impact of single gene disease discoveries on diabetes research and clinical practice.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22996131 PMCID: PMC3488607 DOI: 10.1007/s11892-012-0325-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Diab Rep ISSN: 1534-4827 Impact factor: 4.810
Select important steps in unraveling genetic heterogeneity of monogenic diabetes
| Beta cell disease | Insulin resistance | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Year | Disease | Year | Disease |
| 1992–1999 | HNF4A MODY, GCK, HNF1A MODY, HNF1B MODY, IPF MODY, Neurod1 MODY(formerly MODY 1-6) | 1988 | Type A insulin resistance |
| 1992 | MIDD | 1988 | Donohue syndrome |
| 1998 | Wolfram syndrome | 2000 | Familial partial lipodystrophy |
| 2004–2006 | Potassium channel sub-unit related PNDM | 2002 | Generalized lipodystrophy |
| 2007 | Insulin related PNDM | ||
Variants within “monogenic diabetes” genes associated with T2DM—either identified or confirmed by large scale association studies
| Locus | Chromosome | Monogenic phenotype | T2DM-associated variant |
|---|---|---|---|
|
| 3 | Insulin resistance syndrome | Pro12Ala |
|
| 11 | PNMD, TNDM, MODY | Glu23Lys |
|
| 11 | PNMD, TNDM, MODY | Ala369Ser |
|
| 17 | HNF1B MODY | rs3110641 |
|
| 4 | Wolfram syndrome | rs10010131, rs6446482 |
|
| 12 | HNF1A MODY | rs7957197 |
|
| 7 | GCK MODY, PNDM | rs1799884 |
Monogenic defects of insulin secretion
| Genes | Function of the protein or tRNA | Phenotype of mutation carriers |
|---|---|---|
|
| Involvement in beta cell differentiation, proliferation and insulin synthesis | MODY, rarely PNDM if biallelic dysfunction |
|
| Non-receptor tyrosine-kinase regulating insulin synthesis | MODY |
|
| Glucose transport to beta cell | Fanconi-Bickel syndrome |
|
| Glucose phosphorylation in the limiting step of ATP production in beta cell | MODY, PNDM if biallelic dysfunction |
| mitochondrial | Mitochondrial ATP synthesis | MIDD |
|
| Structure and function of the ATP-sensitive potassium channel of beta cells | PNDM, TNDM, MODY |
|
| Coding for insulin | PNDM, MODY |