Recessive mutations in the INS gene result in neonatal diabetes through reduced insulin biosynthesis
Tarih
2010Yazar
Fernandez-Rebollo, Eduardo
Raile, Klemens
Morgan, Noel
Harries, Lorna W.
Castano, Luis
Ellard, Sian
Ferrer, Jorge
Perez de Nanclares, Guiomar
Hattersley, Andrew T.
Bundak, Ruveyde
Locke, Jonathan M.
Angel Maestro, Miguel
Alshaikh, Adnan
del Castillo, Gabriel
Deeb, Asma
Deiss, Dorothee
Fernandez, Juan M.
Godbole, Koumudi
Hussain, Khalid
O'Connell, Michele
Klupa, Thomasz
Kolouskova, Stanislava
Mohsin, Fauzia
Perlman, Kusiel
Sumnik, Zdenek
Rial, Jose M.
Ugarte, Estibaliz
Garin, Intza
Edghill, Emma L.
Akerman, Ildem
Rubio-Cabezas, Oscar
Rica, Itxaso
Vasanthi, Thiruvengadam
Johnstone, Karen
Flanagan, Sarah E.
Martinez, Rosa
Castano, Carlos
Patch, Ann-Marie
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Heterozygous coding mutations in the INS gene that encodes preproinsulin were recently shown to be an important cause of permanent neonatal diabetes. These dominantly acting mutations prevent normal folding of proinsulin, which leads to beta-cell death through endoplasmic reticulum stress and apoptosis. We now report 10 different recessive INS mutations in 15 probands with neonatal diabetes. Functional studies showed that recessive mutations resulted in diabetes because of decreased insulin biosynthesis through distinct mechanisms, including gene deletion, lack of the translation initiation signal, and altered mRNA stability because of the disruption of a polyadenylation signal. A subset of recessive mutations caused abnormal INS transcription, including the deletion of the C1 and E1 cis regulatory elements, or three different single base-pair substitutions in a CC dinucleotide sequence located between E1 and A1 elements. In keeping with an earlier and more severe beta-cell defect, patients with recessive INS mutations had a lower birth weight (-3.2 SD score vs.-2.0 SD score) and were diagnosed earlier (median 1 week vs. 10 weeks) compared to those with dominant INS mutations. Mutations in the insulin gene can therefore result in neonatal diabetes as a result of two contrasting pathogenic mechanisms. Moreover, the recessively inherited mutations provide a genetic demonstration of the essential role of multiple sequence elements that regulate the biosynthesis of insulin in man.
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