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Transient Neonatal Diabetes, ZFP57, and Hypomethylation of Multiple Imprinted Loci: A detailed follow-up

OBJECTIVE: Transient neonatal diabetes mellitus 1 (TNDM1) is the most common cause of diabetes presenting at birth. Approximately 5% of the cases are due to recessive ZFP57 mutations, causing hypomethylation at the TNDM locus and other imprinted loci (HIL). This has consequences for patient care bec...

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Autores principales: Boonen, Susanne E., Mackay, Deborah J.G., Hahnemann, Johanne M.D., Docherty, Louise, Grønskov, Karen, Lehmann, Anna, Larsen, Lise G., Haemers, Andreas P., Kockaerts, Yves, Dooms, Lutgarde, Vũ, Dũng Chí, Ngoc, C.T. Bich, Nguyen, Phuong Bich, Kordonouri, Olga, Sundberg, Frida, Dayanikli, Pinar, Puthi, Vijith, Acerini, Carlo, Massoud, Ahmed F., Tümer, Zeynep, Temple, I. Karen
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Diabetes Association 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3579357/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23150280
http://dx.doi.org/10.2337/dc12-0700
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author Boonen, Susanne E.
Mackay, Deborah J.G.
Hahnemann, Johanne M.D.
Docherty, Louise
Grønskov, Karen
Lehmann, Anna
Larsen, Lise G.
Haemers, Andreas P.
Kockaerts, Yves
Dooms, Lutgarde
Vũ, Dũng Chí
Ngoc, C.T. Bich
Nguyen, Phuong Bich
Kordonouri, Olga
Sundberg, Frida
Dayanikli, Pinar
Puthi, Vijith
Acerini, Carlo
Massoud, Ahmed F.
Tümer, Zeynep
Temple, I. Karen
author_facet Boonen, Susanne E.
Mackay, Deborah J.G.
Hahnemann, Johanne M.D.
Docherty, Louise
Grønskov, Karen
Lehmann, Anna
Larsen, Lise G.
Haemers, Andreas P.
Kockaerts, Yves
Dooms, Lutgarde
Vũ, Dũng Chí
Ngoc, C.T. Bich
Nguyen, Phuong Bich
Kordonouri, Olga
Sundberg, Frida
Dayanikli, Pinar
Puthi, Vijith
Acerini, Carlo
Massoud, Ahmed F.
Tümer, Zeynep
Temple, I. Karen
author_sort Boonen, Susanne E.
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: Transient neonatal diabetes mellitus 1 (TNDM1) is the most common cause of diabetes presenting at birth. Approximately 5% of the cases are due to recessive ZFP57 mutations, causing hypomethylation at the TNDM locus and other imprinted loci (HIL). This has consequences for patient care because it has impact on the phenotype and recurrence risk for families. We have determined the genotype, phenotype, and epigenotype of the first 10 families to alert health professionals to this newly described genetic subgroup of diabetes. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: The 10 families (14 homozygous/compound heterozygous individuals) with ZFP57 mutations were ascertained through TNDM1 diagnostic testing. ZFP57 was sequenced in probands and their relatives, and the methylation levels at multiple maternally and paternally imprinted loci were determined. Medical and family histories were obtained, and clinical examination was performed. RESULTS: The key clinical features in probands were transient neonatal diabetes, intrauterine growth retardation, macroglossia, heart defects, and developmental delay. However, the finding of two homozygous relatives without diabetes and normal intelligence showed that the phenotype could be very variable. The epigenotype always included total loss of methylation at the TNDM1 locus and reproducible combinations of differential hypomethylation at other maternally imprinted loci, including tissue mosaicism. CONCLUSIONS: There is yet no clear genotype–epigenotype–phenotype correlation to explain the variable clinical presentation, and this results in difficulties predicting the prognosis of affected individuals. However, many cases have a more severe phenotype than seen in other causes of TNDM1. Further cases and global epigenetic testing are needed to clarify this.
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spelling pubmed-35793572014-03-01 Transient Neonatal Diabetes, ZFP57, and Hypomethylation of Multiple Imprinted Loci: A detailed follow-up Boonen, Susanne E. Mackay, Deborah J.G. Hahnemann, Johanne M.D. Docherty, Louise Grønskov, Karen Lehmann, Anna Larsen, Lise G. Haemers, Andreas P. Kockaerts, Yves Dooms, Lutgarde Vũ, Dũng Chí Ngoc, C.T. Bich Nguyen, Phuong Bich Kordonouri, Olga Sundberg, Frida Dayanikli, Pinar Puthi, Vijith Acerini, Carlo Massoud, Ahmed F. Tümer, Zeynep Temple, I. Karen Diabetes Care Original Research OBJECTIVE: Transient neonatal diabetes mellitus 1 (TNDM1) is the most common cause of diabetes presenting at birth. Approximately 5% of the cases are due to recessive ZFP57 mutations, causing hypomethylation at the TNDM locus and other imprinted loci (HIL). This has consequences for patient care because it has impact on the phenotype and recurrence risk for families. We have determined the genotype, phenotype, and epigenotype of the first 10 families to alert health professionals to this newly described genetic subgroup of diabetes. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: The 10 families (14 homozygous/compound heterozygous individuals) with ZFP57 mutations were ascertained through TNDM1 diagnostic testing. ZFP57 was sequenced in probands and their relatives, and the methylation levels at multiple maternally and paternally imprinted loci were determined. Medical and family histories were obtained, and clinical examination was performed. RESULTS: The key clinical features in probands were transient neonatal diabetes, intrauterine growth retardation, macroglossia, heart defects, and developmental delay. However, the finding of two homozygous relatives without diabetes and normal intelligence showed that the phenotype could be very variable. The epigenotype always included total loss of methylation at the TNDM1 locus and reproducible combinations of differential hypomethylation at other maternally imprinted loci, including tissue mosaicism. CONCLUSIONS: There is yet no clear genotype–epigenotype–phenotype correlation to explain the variable clinical presentation, and this results in difficulties predicting the prognosis of affected individuals. However, many cases have a more severe phenotype than seen in other causes of TNDM1. Further cases and global epigenetic testing are needed to clarify this. American Diabetes Association 2013-03 2013-02-13 /pmc/articles/PMC3579357/ /pubmed/23150280 http://dx.doi.org/10.2337/dc12-0700 Text en © 2013 by the American Diabetes Association. Readers may use this article as long as the work is properly cited, the use is educational and not for profit, and the work is not altered. See http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ for details.
spellingShingle Original Research
Boonen, Susanne E.
Mackay, Deborah J.G.
Hahnemann, Johanne M.D.
Docherty, Louise
Grønskov, Karen
Lehmann, Anna
Larsen, Lise G.
Haemers, Andreas P.
Kockaerts, Yves
Dooms, Lutgarde
Vũ, Dũng Chí
Ngoc, C.T. Bich
Nguyen, Phuong Bich
Kordonouri, Olga
Sundberg, Frida
Dayanikli, Pinar
Puthi, Vijith
Acerini, Carlo
Massoud, Ahmed F.
Tümer, Zeynep
Temple, I. Karen
Transient Neonatal Diabetes, ZFP57, and Hypomethylation of Multiple Imprinted Loci: A detailed follow-up
title Transient Neonatal Diabetes, ZFP57, and Hypomethylation of Multiple Imprinted Loci: A detailed follow-up
title_full Transient Neonatal Diabetes, ZFP57, and Hypomethylation of Multiple Imprinted Loci: A detailed follow-up
title_fullStr Transient Neonatal Diabetes, ZFP57, and Hypomethylation of Multiple Imprinted Loci: A detailed follow-up
title_full_unstemmed Transient Neonatal Diabetes, ZFP57, and Hypomethylation of Multiple Imprinted Loci: A detailed follow-up
title_short Transient Neonatal Diabetes, ZFP57, and Hypomethylation of Multiple Imprinted Loci: A detailed follow-up
title_sort transient neonatal diabetes, zfp57, and hypomethylation of multiple imprinted loci: a detailed follow-up
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3579357/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23150280
http://dx.doi.org/10.2337/dc12-0700
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