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Dominant ER Stress-Inducing Mutations Underlie a Genetic Syndrome of Neonatal/Infancy-Onset Diabetes, Congenital Sensorineural Deafness, and Congenital Cataracts.

Citation
De Franco, E., et al. “Dominant Er Stress-Inducing Mutations Underlie A Genetic Syndrome Of Neonatal/Infancy-Onset Diabetes, Congenital Sensorineural Deafness, And Congenital Cataracts.”. Diabetes, pp. 2044-2053.
Center Washington University in St Louis
Author Elisa De Franco, Sarah E Flanagan, Takuya Yagi, Damien Abreu, Jana Mahadevan, Matthew B Johnson, Garan Jones, Fernanda Acosta, Mphele Mulaudzi, Ngee Lek, Vera Oh, Oliver Petz, Richard Caswell, Sian Ellard, Fumihiko Urano, Andrew T Hattersley
Abstract

Neonatal diabetes is frequently part of a complex syndrome with extrapancreatic features: 18 genes causing syndromic neonatal diabetes have been identified to date. There are still patients with neonatal diabetes who have novel genetic syndromes. We performed exome sequencing in a patient and his unrelated, unaffected parents to identify the genetic etiology of a syndrome characterized by neonatal diabetes, sensorineural deafness, and congenital cataracts. Further testing was performed in 311 patients with diabetes diagnosed before 1 year of age in whom all known genetic causes had been excluded. We identified 5 patients, including the initial case, with three heterozygous missense mutations in (4/5 confirmed de novo). They had diabetes diagnosed before 12 months (2 before 6 months) (5/5), sensorineural deafness diagnosed soon after birth (5/5), congenital cataracts (4/5), and hypotonia (4/5). In vitro studies showed that these mutations are functionally different from the known recessive Wolfram syndrome-causing mutations, as they tend to aggregate and induce robust endoplasmic reticulum stress. Our results establish specific dominant mutations as a cause of a novel syndrome including neonatal/infancy-onset diabetes, congenital cataracts, and sensorineural deafness. This syndrome has a discrete pathophysiology and differs genetically and clinically from recessive Wolfram syndrome.

Year of Publication
2017
Journal
Diabetes
Volume
66
Issue
7
Number of Pages
2044-2053
Date Published
12/2017
ISSN Number
1939-327X
DOI
10.2337/db16-1296
Alternate Journal
Diabetes
PMID
28468959
PMCID
PMC5482085
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