| Literature DB >> 24735133 |
S Costantini1, G Malerba, G Contreas, M Corradi, S P Marin Vargas, A Giorgetti, C Maffeis.
Abstract
Heterozygous loss-of-function mutations in the glucokinase (GCK) gene cause maturity-onset diabetes of the young (MODY) subtype GCK (GCK-MODY/MODY2). GCK sequencing revealed 16 distinct mutations (13 missense, 1 nonsense, 1 splice site, and 1 frameshift-deletion) co-segregating with hyperglycaemia in 23 GCK-MODY families. Four missense substitutions (c.718A>G/p.Asn240Asp, c.757G>T/p.Val253Phe, c.872A>C/p.Lys291Thr, and c.1151C>T/p.Ala384Val) were novel and a founder effect for the nonsense mutation (c.76C>T/p.Gln26*) was supposed. We tested whether an accurate bioinformatics approach could strengthen family-genetic evidence for missense variant pathogenicity in routine diagnostics, where wet-lab functional assays are generally unviable. In silico analyses of the novel missense variants, including orthologous sequence conservation, amino acid substitution (AAS)-pathogenicity predictors, structural modeling and splicing predictors, suggested that the AASs and/or the underlying nucleotide changes are likely to be pathogenic. This study shows how a careful bioinformatics analysis could provide effective suggestions to help molecular-genetic diagnosis in absence of wet-lab validations.Entities:
Keywords: GCK; MODY; bioinformatics analysis; co-segregation analysis; missense variant; pathogenicity prediction; splicing prediction
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24735133 DOI: 10.1111/cge.12406
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Genet ISSN: 0009-9163 Impact factor: 4.438