AI Article Synopsis

  • - The study investigated genetic variants responsible for monogenic diabetes in 60 Russian children diagnosed with non-type 1 diabetes before age 18, utilizing whole-exome sequencing across 35 genes associated with MODY and neonatal diabetes.
  • - Researchers identified 38 genetic variants in 55% of patients, with a significant majority linked to MODY-related genes, particularly GCK, while a smaller group had variants in MODY-unrelated genes.
  • - The findings suggest a high occurrence of various genetic variants, emphasizing the importance of starting monogenic diabetes diagnostics in Russian children with GCK testing, while also highlighting the effectiveness of whole-exome sequencing for identifying rare variants.

Article Abstract

The present study reports on the frequency and the spectrum of genetic variants causative of monogenic diabetes in Russian children with non‑type 1 diabetes mellitus. The present study included 60 unrelated Russian children with non‑type 1 diabetes mellitus diagnosed before the age of 18 years. Genetic variants were screened using whole‑exome sequencing (WES) in a panel of 35 genes causative of maturity onset diabetes of the young (MODY) and transient or permanent neonatal diabetes. Verification of the WES results was performed using PCR‑direct sequencing. A total of 38 genetic variants were identified in 33 out of 60 patients (55%). The majority of patients (27/33, 81.8%) had variants in MODY‑related genes: GCK (n=19), HNF1A (n=2), PAX4 (n=1), ABCC8 (n=1), KCNJ11 (n=1), GCK+HNF1A (n=1), GCK+BLK (n=1) and GCK+BLK+WFS1 (n=1). A total of 6 patients (6/33, 18.2%) had variants in MODY‑unrelated genes: GATA6 (n=1), WFS1 (n=3), EIF2AK3 (n=1) and SLC19A2 (n=1). A total of 15 out of 38 variants were novel, including GCK, HNF1A, BLK, WFS1, EIF2AK3 and SLC19A2. To summarize, the present study demonstrates a high frequency and a wide spectrum of genetic variants causative of monogenic diabetes in Russian children with non‑type 1 diabetes mellitus. The spectrum includes previously known and novel variants in MODY‑related and unrelated genes, with multiple variants in a number of patients. The prevalence of GCK variants indicates that diagnostics of monogenic diabetes in Russian children may begin with testing for MODY2. However, the remaining variants are present at low frequencies in 9 different genes, altogether amounting to ~50% of the cases and highlighting the efficiency of using WES in non‑GCK‑MODY cases.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6854535PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3892/mmr.2019.10751DOI Listing

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