| Literature DB >> 30377832 |
Shivani Misra1, Katharine R Owen2.
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Monogenic forms of diabetes have specific treatments that differ from the standard care provided for type 1 and type 2 diabetes, making the appropriate diagnosis essential. In this review, we discuss current clinical challenges that remain, including improving case-finding strategies, particularly those that have transethnic applicability, and understanding the interpretation of genetic variants as pathogenic, with clinically meaningful impacts. RECENTEntities:
Keywords: Genetic testing; HNF1A; MODY; Monogenic diabetes; Neonatal diabetes
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30377832 PMCID: PMC6209016 DOI: 10.1007/s11892-018-1111-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Diab Rep ISSN: 1534-4827 Impact factor: 4.810
Genes implicated in monogenic diabetes; MODY and neonatal diabetes
| Gene | Protein | Function | Inheritance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Maturity onset diabetes of the young | |||
| Common causes of MODY with well-established evidence-base | |||
| | Hepatocyte nuclear factor 1α | Beta-cell transcription factor | Autosomal dominant |
| | Hepatocyte nuclear factor 4α | Beta-cell transcription factor | Autosomal dominant |
| | Glucokinase | Glucose-sensor, first rate-limiting enzyme in glycolysis | Autosomal dominant |
| | Hepatocyte nuclear factor 1β | Beta-cell transcription factor | Autosomal dominant |
| | Sulphonylurea receptor subunit of β-cell K-ATP channel | Closure of the ATP-sensitive potassium channel leads to beta-cell membrane depolarisation, calcium influx and fusion of insulin secretory granules with beta-cell membrane | Autosomal dominant |
| | Potassium channel subunit of β-cell K-ATP channel | Autosomal dominant | |
| | Insulin | Production of insulin or insulin action | Autosomal dominant |
| Rare causes of MODY with reasonable evidence supporting | |||
|
| Neurogenic differentiation factor 1 | Beta-cell transcription factor | Autosomal dominant |
| | Insulin promotor factor 1 | Beta-cell transcription factor | Recessive |
| | Carboxyl ester lipase | Exocrine pancreas function | Deletion of variable number tandem repeat |
| | Wolframin | Function of the endoplasmic reticulum | Recessive |
| | Regulatory factor X 6 | Beta-cell transcription factor | Dominant protein truncating variant |
| | Adaptor protein, phosphotyrosine interaction, PH domain, and leucine zipper containing 1 | Protein that bind to AKT in the insulin-signalling pathway | Autosomal dominant |
| Neonatal diabetes | |||
| Causes of neonatal diabetes, accounting for > 2.5% of cases | |||
| | Sulphonylurea receptor subunit of β-cell K-ATP channel | Closure of the ATP-sensitive potassium channel leads to beta-cell membrane depolarisation, calcium influx and fusion of insulin secretory granules with beta-cell membrane | Dominant, often de novo or recessive |
| | Potassium channel subunit of β-cell K-ATP channel | Dominant, often de novo | |
| | Glucokinase | Glucose-sensor, first rate-limiting enzyme in glycolysis | Autosomal recessive |
| | GATA binding factor 6 | Transcription factor | Dominant, often de novo |
| | Insulin | Production of insulin or insulin action | Dominant, often de novo or recessive |
| | Pancreatic associate transcription factor 1 A | Transcription factor involved in pancreatic development | Recessive |
| | Eukaryotic translation initiation factor 2 alpha kinase 3 | Kinase enzyme in endoplasmic reticulum | Recessive |
| | Regulatory factor X 6 | Beta-cell transcription factor | Recessive |
Some of the information in Table 1 came from https://www.diabetesgenes.org/tests-for-diabetes-subtypes/targeted-next-generation-sequencing-analysis-of-45-monogenic-diabetes-genes/” [5]
Strategies to establish pathogenicity of a variant in diabetes genes
| Approach | Parameter | Description |
|---|---|---|
| In silico data | Genome database searches | Search of genome/exome databases e.g. GnomAD to establish mean allele frequency and also assess presence of other variants at affected nucleotide position |
| Sequence variant databases | For example, dbSNP, Exome Variant Server or 1000 genomes NGRL | |
| Mutation database searches | Human Mutation Genetic Database search, imports published data on genetic mutations. Limitations, as mutations published may not necessarily prove to be pathogenic | |
| Amino acid change | Examines the effect of the amino acid substitution on charge and polarity. A significant change in polarity or charge from the amino acid substitution might be more likely to impair protein function | |
| Species conservation | Conservation can be scored using tools such as ConSurf, through which multiple sequence alignments can be undertaken to compare orthologs across species. Essential sites for protein function are likely to be invariant across species (highly conserved) | |
| Software prediction | Software prediction models: SIFT, PolyPhen2 and AlignGVGD | |
| Cryptic splice site | Online software that can predict whether the variant creates a cryptic splice site or alters an existing one | |
| In vitro data | Cellular studies | For HNF1A, GCK and KCNJ11, published studies exist that demonstrate effects of variants on protein function. In turn, these can be fed back to affected individuals to establish best treatment options or management approaches. Lack of accessibility limits widespread use |
| Clinical data | Biomarkers/systemic features | Examining for features associated with the genetic mutation may help decipher whether a variant is disease-causing or benign. |
| Treatment response | Demonstrating sensitivity to sulphonylurea therapy is a compelling piece of evidence favouring pathogenicity in HNF1A and HNF4A variants | |
| Co-segregation studies | Proving the variant segregates with diabetes in a family is compelling evidence in favour of pathogenicity. To achieve this robustly, in an affected kindred, people with diabetes should have the variant and those without the variant an absence of diabetes. Conclusive proof comes from co-segregation in a different kindred to the proband |