Mutation screening in 18 Caucasian families suggest the existence of other MODY genes.

Article Details

Citation

Chevre JC, Hani EH, Boutin P, Vaxillaire M, Blanche H, Vionnet N, Pardini VC, Timsit J, Larger E, Charpentier G, Beckers D, Maes M, Bellanne-Chantelot C, Velho G, Froguel P

Mutation screening in 18 Caucasian families suggest the existence of other MODY genes.

Diabetologia. 1998 Sep;41(9):1017-23.

PubMed ID
9754819 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

Maturity-onset diabetes of the young (MODY) is a heterogeneous subtype of non-insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus characterised by early onset, autosomal dominant inheritance and a primary defect in insulin secretion. To date five MODY genes have been identified: hepatocyte nuclear factor-4 alpha (HNF-4alpha/MODY1/TCF14) on chromosome 20q, glucokinase (GCK/MODY2) on chromosome 7p, hepatocyte nuclear factor-1 alpha (HNF-1alpha/MODY3/TCF1) on chromosome 12q, insulin promoter factor-1 (IPF1/MODY4) on chromosome 13q and hepatocyte nuclear factor-1 beta (HNF-1beta/MODY5/TCF2) on chromosome 17cen-q. We have screened the HNF-4alpha, HNF-1alpha and HNF-1beta genes in members of 18 MODY kindreds who tested negative for glucokinase mutations. Five missense (G31D, R159W, A161T, R200W, R271W), one substitution at the splice donor site of intron 5 (IVS5nt + 2T-->A) and one deletion mutation (P379fsdelT) were found in the HNF-1alpha gene, but no MODY-associated mutations were found in the HNF-4alpha and HNF-1beta genes. Of 67 French MODY families that we have now studied, 42 (63%) have mutations in the glucokinase gene, 14 (21%) have mutations in the HNF-1alpha gene, and 11 (16%) have no mutations in the HNF-4alpha, IPF1 and HNF-1beta genes. Eleven families do not have mutations in the five known MODY genes suggesting that there is at least one additional locus that can cause MODY.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Hepatocyte nuclear factor 1-alphaP20823Details