Baroni M G, Sentinelli F, Massa O, Romeo S, Colombo C, Di Mario U, Barbetti F
Department of Clinical Science, University of Rome La Sapienza, Italy.
J Mol Med (Berl). 2001 Jun;79(5-6):270-4. doi: 10.1007/s001090100220.
Maturity-onset diabetes of the young (MODY), an autosomal dominant, early-onset form of type-2 diabetes, is caused by mutations in five different genes all leading to defect(s) in the pancreatic beta cell. However, some patients with this form of diabetes do not bear a mutation in any of the known (MODY1-MODY5) loci, a notion prompting the search for new MODY genes. Clinical and genetic data point toward a defect in beta cell function in the majority of patients with MODY, and partners of the glucose-sensing device are reasonable functional candidates. The high-capacity glucose transporter GLUT2 has the ideal kinetic features for performing this task. However, complete GLUT2 deficiency in humans leads to hepato-renal glycogenosis (Fanconi-Bickel syndrome), and heterozygous GLUT2 mutations apparently behave in a recessive manner. Furthermore, in the human beta cell GLUT1 mRNA is predominant when compared to GLUT2 and glucose influx appears to be largely mediated by this low-Km transporter. Thus, we looked for the presence of sequence variants by polymerase chain reaction and single-strand conformation polymorphism (PCR-SSCP) within the GLUT1 gene in 90 Italian pedigrees negative at the search for mutations in glucokinase (MODY2) and hepatocyte nuclear factor-1alpha (MODY3), the two genes responsible for about 60% of MODY cases in Italian children. We found three already described silent mutations and a new single base deletion in position -173 of the 5' regulatory region. The -173de1A variant, which was detected in the heterozygous or homozygous state in 30.8% of MODY patients examined and is located in a Nuclear Factor Y binding sequence, is not associated with hyperglycemia in affected relatives of MODY probands. In conclusion, it appears from these results that the glucose transporter gene GLUT1 is unlikely to play a major role in the etiology of MODY diabetes.
青年发病的成年型糖尿病(MODY)是一种常染色体显性、早发性2型糖尿病,由五个不同基因的突变引起,所有这些突变都会导致胰岛β细胞出现缺陷。然而,一些患有这种糖尿病的患者在任何已知的(MODY1 - MODY5)位点都没有突变,这促使人们去寻找新的MODY基因。临床和遗传数据表明,大多数MODY患者存在β细胞功能缺陷,而葡萄糖传感装置的相关蛋白是合理的功能候选者。高容量葡萄糖转运蛋白GLUT2具有执行此任务的理想动力学特征。然而,人类完全缺乏GLUT2会导致肝肾糖原累积症(范可尼 - 比克综合征),杂合的GLUT2突变显然呈隐性表现。此外,在人类β细胞中,与GLUT2相比,GLUT1 mRNA占主导地位,葡萄糖内流似乎主要由这种低Km转运蛋白介导。因此,我们通过聚合酶链反应和单链构象多态性(PCR - SSCP),在90个意大利家系中寻找GLUT1基因的序列变异,这些家系在葡萄糖激酶(MODY2)和肝细胞核因子 - 1α(MODY3)的突变检测中呈阴性,这两个基因在意大利儿童的MODY病例中约占60%。我们发现了三个已报道的沉默突变以及5'调控区 - 173位的一个新的单碱基缺失。 - 173delA变异在30.8%的受检MODY患者中以杂合或纯合状态被检测到,它位于一个核因子Y结合序列中,在MODY先证者的患病亲属中与高血糖无关。总之,从这些结果来看,葡萄糖转运蛋白基因GLUT1似乎不太可能在MODY糖尿病的病因中起主要作用。