| Literature DB >> 24715918 |
Jonathan R Skinner1, Renate Marquis-Nicholson2, Alix Luangpraseuth3, Rick Cutfield4, Jackie Crawford5, Donald R Love6.
Abstract
Sudden unexpected nocturnal death among patients with diabetes occurs approximately ten times more commonly than in the general population. Malignant ventricular arrhythmia due to Brugada syndrome has been postulated as a cause, since a glucose-insulin bolus can unmask the Brugada electrocardiographic signature in genetically predisposed individuals. In this report we present a 16-year-old male with insulin-dependent diabetes who died suddenly at night. His diabetes had been well controlled, without significant hypoglycaemia. At autopsy, he had a full stomach and a glucose level of 7 mmol/L in vitreous humor, excluding hypoglycaemia. Genetic analysis of autopsy DNA revealed a missense mutation, c.370A>G (p.Ile124Val), in the GPD1L gene. A parent carried the same mutation and has QT prolongation. Mutations in this gene have been linked to Brugada syndrome and sudden infant death. The patient may have died from a ventricular arrhythmia, secondary to occult Brugada syndrome, triggered by a full stomach and insulin. The data suggest that molecular autopsies are warranted to investigate other cases of the diabetic dead-in-bed syndrome.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24715918 PMCID: PMC3970469 DOI: 10.1155/2014/647252
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Case Rep Med
Figure 1Sequence analysis of proband. Sequence electropherograms show the presence of the c.370A>G, p.Ile124Val (p.I124V), mutation in exon 4 of the GPD1L gene.
Figure 212-lead electrocardiagram of the deceased's father. The ST-T segment is unusual and very flat in lead II, such that determining the end of the T wave is difficult. In lead I, R-R is 690 ms, QT is 396 ms, and QTc is 477 ms. In lead V5, R-R is 711 ms, QT s 391 ms, and QTc is 464 ms; the T wave is of low amplitude with a slight double bump morphology.
In silico analysis of GPD1L gene* mutation.
| Protein prediction programmes | Splice site prediction programmes | ||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PolyPhen-2a,∗∗ | Mutation | Mutation | I-MUTANT 3.0d | MutPrede | SNPs and GOf | SIFTg | SNAPh | ASSPi
| HSFl |
| Benign | Disease-causing | Neutral | Neutral | Deleterious | Neutral | Tolerated | Neutral | No effect | SRp55 site created |
*Refseq transcript accession number NM_015141.3.3; Refseq protein accession number NP_055956.1; uniprot accession number Q8N335.
**Scores relate to predictions based on HumDiv and HumVar models.
a http://genetics.bwh.harvard.edu/pph2/.
b http://www.mutationtaster.org/; P refers to the probability value, which is the probability of the prediction.
c http://mutationassessor.org/.
d http://gpcr2.biocomp.unibo.it/cgi/predictors/I-Mutant3.0/I-Mutant3.0.cgi; RI refers to reliability index.
e http://mutpred.mutdb.org/; Pdel refers to the probability that the variant is a deleterious mutation.
f http://snps-and-go.biocomp.unibo.it/snps-and-go/; RI refers to reliability index.
g http://sift.jcvi.org/www/SIFT_BLink_submit.html; SR refers to a SeqRep value that corresponds to the fraction of sequences that contain one of the basic amino acids. A low fraction indicates the position is either severely gapped or unalignable and has little information, so it offers poor predictive capability. P refers to the scaled probability that the amino acid change is deleterious (a value less than 0.05 is predicted to be deleterious).
h https://rostlab.org/services/snap/submit; RI refers to reliability index.
i http://wangcomputing.com/assp/index.html.
j http://www.fruitfly.org/seq_tools/splice.html.
k http://rulai.cshl.edu/cgi-bin/tools/ESE3/esefinder.cgi; screened for human U2-type splice donor and acceptor sites above default thresholds.
l http://www.umd.be/HSF/.