Literature DB >> 31658956

High Prevalence of a Monogenic Cause in Han Chinese Diagnosed With Type 1 Diabetes, Partly Driven by Nonsyndromic Recessive WFS1 Mutations.

Meihang Li1,2,3, Sihua Wang3, Kuanfeng Xu1, Yang Chen1, Qi Fu1, Yong Gu1, Yun Shi1, Mei Zhang1, Min Sun1, Heng Chen1, Xiuqun Han3, Yangxi Li3,4, Zhoukai Tang3, Lejing Cai3, Zhiqiang Li2, Yongyong Shi2, Tao Yang5, Constantin Polychronakos6,4,7.   

Abstract

It is estimated that ∼1% of European ancestry patients clinically diagnosed with type 1 diabetes (T1D) actually have monogenic forms of the disease. Because of the much lower incidence of true T1D in East Asians, we hypothesized that the percentage would be much higher. To test this, we sequenced the exome of 82 Chinese Han patients clinically diagnosed with T1D but negative for three autoantibodies. Analysis focused on established or proposed monogenic diabetes genes. We found credible mutations in 18 of the 82 autoantibody-negative patients (22%). All mutations had consensus pathogenicity support by five algorithms. As in Europeans, the most common gene was HNF1A (MODY3), in 6 of 18 cases. Surprisingly, almost as frequent were diallelic mutations in WFS1, known to cause Wolfram syndrome but also described in nonsyndromic cases. Fasting C-peptide varied widely and was not predictive. Given the 27.4% autoantibody negativity in Chinese and 22% mutation rate, we estimate that ∼6% of Chinese with a clinical T1D diagnosis have monogenic diabetes. Our findings support universal sequencing of autoantibody-negative cases as standard of care in East Asian patients with a clinical T1D diagnosis. Nonsyndromic diabetes with WSF1 mutations is not rare in Chinese. Its response to alternative treatments should be investigated.
© 2019 by the American Diabetes Association.

Entities:  

Year:  2019        PMID: 31658956     DOI: 10.2337/db19-0510

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Diabetes        ISSN: 0012-1797            Impact factor:   9.461


  5 in total

Review 1.  Clinical Spectrum Associated with Wolfram Syndrome Type 1 and Type 2: A Review on Genotype-Phenotype Correlations.

Authors:  Maurizio Delvecchio; Matteo Iacoviello; Antonino Pantaleo; Nicoletta Resta
Journal:  Int J Environ Res Public Health       Date:  2021-04-30       Impact factor: 3.390

2.  Monogenic Causes in the Type 1 Diabetes Genetics Consortium Cohort: Low Genetic Risk for Autoimmunity in Case Selection.

Authors:  Luc Marchand; Meihang Li; Coralie Leblicq; Ibrar Rafique; Tugba Alarcon-Martinez; Claire Lange; Laura Rendon; Emily Tam; Ariane Courville-Le Bouyonnec; Constantin Polychronakos
Journal:  J Clin Endocrinol Metab       Date:  2021-05-13       Impact factor: 5.958

3.  Searching for Monogenic Diabetes in a High-risk Autoimmune Diabetes Cohort: Needles in a Paperclip Stack.

Authors:  Daniel Gamu; William T Gibson
Journal:  J Clin Endocrinol Metab       Date:  2021-07-13       Impact factor: 5.958

4.  Causal variants in Maturity Onset Diabetes of the Young (MODY) - A systematic review.

Authors:  Ibrar Rafique; Asif Mir; Muhammad Arif Nadeem Saqib; Muhammad Naeem; Luc Marchand; Constantin Polychronakos
Journal:  BMC Endocr Disord       Date:  2021-11-11       Impact factor: 2.763

5.  Clinical and genetic analysis in a Chinese cohort of children and adolescents with diabetes/persistent hyperglycemia.

Authors:  Yu Ding; Niu Li; Dan Lou; Qianwen Zhang; Guoying Chang; Juan Li; Xin Li; Qun Li; Xiaodong Huang; Jian Wang; Fan Jiang; Xiumin Wang
Journal:  J Diabetes Investig       Date:  2020-07-23       Impact factor: 4.232

  5 in total

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