Missense mutation of amylin gene (S20G) in Japanese NIDDM patients.

Article Details

Citation

Sakagashira S, Sanke T, Hanabusa T, Shimomura H, Ohagi S, Kumagaye KY, Nakajima K, Nanjo K

Missense mutation of amylin gene (S20G) in Japanese NIDDM patients.

Diabetes. 1996 Sep;45(9):1279-81.

PubMed ID
8772735 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

Many studies suggest that amylin, which is cosecreted with insulin from islet beta-cells, is a biologically active peptide and modulates plasma glucose levels. We therefore scanned the amylin gene for mutations in 294 Japanese NIDDM patients by single-strand conformational polymorphism, and we found a single heterozygous missense mutation (Ser-->Gly at position 20: S20G mutation) in 12 NIDDM patients (frequency 4.1%). None of the 187 nondiabetic subjects or 59 IDDM patients had the mutation. Of 12 patients carrying the mutation, 8 were diagnosed as having NIDDM at a relatively early age (< or = 35 years), and they had severe diabetes and strong family histories of late-onset NIDDM. On the other hand, the remaining four patients were diagnosed as having NIDDM after age 51, and they had mild diabetes without family histories of diabetes. In high-performance liquid chromatography analysis, a small amount (16%) of amylin immunoreactivity appeared in the position corresponding to normal amylin and a much larger amount (84%) appeared in the position corresponding to mutant amylin. These findings suggest that the S20G mutation of the amylin gene may play a partial role in the pathogenesis of early-onset NIDDM in the Japanese population and may also provide an important model to investigate the true physiological action of amylin.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Islet amyloid polypeptideP10997Details