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  2. Mutations at the BLK locus linked to maturity onset diabetes of the young and beta-cell dysfunction

Mutations at the BLK locus linked to maturity onset diabetes of the young and beta-cell dysfunction

  • Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2009 Aug 25;106(34):14460-5. doi: 10.1073/pnas.0906474106.
Maciej Borowiec 1 Chong W Liew Ryan Thompson Watip Boonyasrisawat Jiang Hu Wojciech M Mlynarski Ilham El Khattabi Sung-Hoon Kim Lorella Marselli Stephen S Rich Andrzej S Krolewski Susan Bonner-Weir Arun Sharma Michele Sale Josyf C Mychaleckyj Rohit N Kulkarni Alessandro Doria
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Research Division, Department of Medicine, Joslin Diabetes Center, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA 02215, USA.
Abstract

Maturity-onset diabetes of the young (MODY) is a subtype of diabetes defined by an autosomal pattern of inheritance and a young age at onset, often before age 25. MODY is genetically heterogeneous, with 8 distinct MODY genes identified to date and more believed to exist. We resequenced 732 kb of genomic sequence at 8p23 in 6 MODY families unlinked to known MODY genes that showed evidence of linkage at that location. Of the 410 sequence differences that we identified, 5 had a frequency <1% in the general population and segregated with diabetes in 3 of the families, including the 2 showing the strongest support for linkage at this location. The 5 mutations were all placed within 100 kb corresponding to the BLK gene. One resulted in an Ala71Thr substitution; the other 4 were noncoding and determined decreased in vitro promoter activity in reporter gene experiments. We found that BLK--a nonreceptor tyrosine-kinase of the Src family of proto-oncogenes--is expressed in beta-cells where it enhances Insulin synthesis and secretion in response to glucose by up-regulating transcription factors Pdx1 and Nkx6.1. These actions are greatly attenuated by the Ala71Thr mutation. These findings point to BLK as a previously unrecognized modulator of beta-cell function, the deficit of which may lead to the development of diabetes.

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