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Permanent neonatal diabetes due to paternal germline mosaicism for an activating mutation of the KCNJ11 Gene encoding the Kir6.2 subunit of the beta-cell potassium adenosine triphosphate channel

Permanent neonatal diabetes due to paternal germline mosaicism for an activating mutation of the KCNJ11 Gene encoding the Kir6.2 subunit of the beta-cell potassium adenosine triphosphate channel
Permanent neonatal diabetes due to paternal germline mosaicism for an activating mutation of the KCNJ11 Gene encoding the Kir6.2 subunit of the beta-cell potassium adenosine triphosphate channel
Activating mutations in the KCNJ11 gene encoding for the Kir6.2 subunit of the ß-cell ATP-sensitive potassium channel have recently been shown to be a common cause of permanent neonatal diabetes. In 80% of probands, these are isolated cases resulting from de novo mutations. We describe a family in which two affected paternal half-siblings were found to be heterozygous for the previously reported R201C mutation. Direct sequencing of leukocyte DNA showed that their clinically unaffected mothers and father were genotypically normal. Quantitative real-time PCR analysis of the father’s leukocyte DNA detected no trace of mutant DNA. These results are consistent with the father being a mosaic for the mutation, which is restricted to his germline. This is the first report of germline mosaicism in any form of monogenic diabetes. The high percentage of permanent neonatal diabetes cases due to de novo KCNJ11 mutations suggests that germline mosaicism may be common. The possibility of germline mosaicism should be considered when counseling recurrence risks for the parents of a child with an apparently de novo KCNJ11 activating mutation.
humans, germ-line mutation, mutation, adenosine triphosphate, potassium, gene expression regulation, arginine, cysteine, diabetes mellitus, child, heterozygote, non-U.S.gov't, fathers, counseling, inwardly rectifying, male, pedigree, infant, blood, risk, genetics, newborn, adenosine, mothers, parents, potassium channels, recurrence, dna, islets of langerhans, alleles, research support, report, missense, mosaicism, analysis, family, metabolism, diabetes
0021-972X
3932-3935
Gloyn, Anna L.
e1ef7043-a852-4f6d-ad90-a644e328af88
Cummings, Elizabeth A.
f0a11716-15c4-47cf-95fa-84d55d0d9fe1
Edghill, Emma L.
227f9dd9-d2f7-43e1-8795-9b6d41fa6ca7
Harries, Lorna W.
930e0a00-d37b-4dfa-a65e-af8039fe6b5b
Scott, Rachel
15a15ba8-515c-4bb5-b9a3-6d4f49574481
Costa, Teresa
eb4636f7-78d4-4704-8365-8f3ea747be09
Temple, I. Karen
d63e7c66-9fb0-46c8-855d-ee2607e6c226
Hattersley, Andrew T.
429254b8-e75b-46bd-a6f6-274130336b0d
Ellard, Sian
6c9b0ede-8980-4602-b063-444b165baa09
Gloyn, Anna L.
e1ef7043-a852-4f6d-ad90-a644e328af88
Cummings, Elizabeth A.
f0a11716-15c4-47cf-95fa-84d55d0d9fe1
Edghill, Emma L.
227f9dd9-d2f7-43e1-8795-9b6d41fa6ca7
Harries, Lorna W.
930e0a00-d37b-4dfa-a65e-af8039fe6b5b
Scott, Rachel
15a15ba8-515c-4bb5-b9a3-6d4f49574481
Costa, Teresa
eb4636f7-78d4-4704-8365-8f3ea747be09
Temple, I. Karen
d63e7c66-9fb0-46c8-855d-ee2607e6c226
Hattersley, Andrew T.
429254b8-e75b-46bd-a6f6-274130336b0d
Ellard, Sian
6c9b0ede-8980-4602-b063-444b165baa09

Gloyn, Anna L., Cummings, Elizabeth A., Edghill, Emma L., Harries, Lorna W., Scott, Rachel, Costa, Teresa, Temple, I. Karen, Hattersley, Andrew T. and Ellard, Sian (2004) Permanent neonatal diabetes due to paternal germline mosaicism for an activating mutation of the KCNJ11 Gene encoding the Kir6.2 subunit of the beta-cell potassium adenosine triphosphate channel. Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, 89 (8), 3932-3935. (doi:10.1210/jc.2004-0568).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Activating mutations in the KCNJ11 gene encoding for the Kir6.2 subunit of the ß-cell ATP-sensitive potassium channel have recently been shown to be a common cause of permanent neonatal diabetes. In 80% of probands, these are isolated cases resulting from de novo mutations. We describe a family in which two affected paternal half-siblings were found to be heterozygous for the previously reported R201C mutation. Direct sequencing of leukocyte DNA showed that their clinically unaffected mothers and father were genotypically normal. Quantitative real-time PCR analysis of the father’s leukocyte DNA detected no trace of mutant DNA. These results are consistent with the father being a mosaic for the mutation, which is restricted to his germline. This is the first report of germline mosaicism in any form of monogenic diabetes. The high percentage of permanent neonatal diabetes cases due to de novo KCNJ11 mutations suggests that germline mosaicism may be common. The possibility of germline mosaicism should be considered when counseling recurrence risks for the parents of a child with an apparently de novo KCNJ11 activating mutation.

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More information

Published date: 2004
Keywords: humans, germ-line mutation, mutation, adenosine triphosphate, potassium, gene expression regulation, arginine, cysteine, diabetes mellitus, child, heterozygote, non-U.S.gov't, fathers, counseling, inwardly rectifying, male, pedigree, infant, blood, risk, genetics, newborn, adenosine, mothers, parents, potassium channels, recurrence, dna, islets of langerhans, alleles, research support, report, missense, mosaicism, analysis, family, metabolism, diabetes

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 24714
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/24714
ISSN: 0021-972X
PURE UUID: 973f4cc9-ff4a-4881-b883-b6eff71dda23
ORCID for I. Karen Temple: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6045-1781

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Date deposited: 03 Apr 2006
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:03

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Contributors

Author: Anna L. Gloyn
Author: Elizabeth A. Cummings
Author: Emma L. Edghill
Author: Lorna W. Harries
Author: Rachel Scott
Author: Teresa Costa
Author: I. Karen Temple ORCID iD
Author: Andrew T. Hattersley
Author: Sian Ellard

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