| Literature DB >> 28073829 |
Reinaldo Sousa Dos Santos1, Mathilde Daures2, Anne Philippi2, Sophie Romero2, Lorella Marselli3, Piero Marchetti3, Valérie Senée2, Delphine Bacq4, Céline Besse4, Baz Baz5, Laura Marroquí1, Sarah Ivanoff6, Julien Masliah-Planchon6, Marc Nicolino7, Jean Soulier6, Gérard Socié8, Decio L Eizirik1, Jean-François Gautier5, Cécile Julier9.
Abstract
We describe a new syndrome characterized by early-onset diabetes associated with bone marrow failure, affecting mostly the erythrocytic lineage. Using whole-exome sequencing in a remotely consanguineous patient from a family with two affected siblings, we identified a single homozygous missense mutation (chr15.hg19:g.48,626,619A>G) located in the dUTPase (DUT) gene (National Center for Biotechnology Information Gene ID 1854), affecting both the mitochondrial (DUT-M p.Y142C) and the nuclear (DUT-N p.Y54C) isoforms. We found the same homozygous mutation in an unrelated consanguineous patient with diabetes and bone marrow aplasia from a family with two affected siblings, whereas none of the >60,000 subjects from the Exome Aggregation Consortium (ExAC) was homozygous for this mutation. This replicated observation probability was highly significant, thus confirming the role of this DUT mutation in this syndrome. DUT is a key enzyme for maintaining DNA integrity by preventing misincorporation of uracil into DNA, which results in DNA toxicity and cell death. We showed that DUT silencing in human and rat pancreatic β-cells results in apoptosis via the intrinsic cell death pathway. Our findings support the importance of tight control of DNA metabolism for β-cell integrity and warrant close metabolic monitoring of patients treated by drugs affecting dUTP balance.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28073829 DOI: 10.2337/db16-0839
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetes ISSN: 0012-1797 Impact factor: 9.461