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Usage Information

Null mutations of NEUROG3 are associated with delayed-onset diabetes mellitus
R. Sergio Solorzano-Vargas, … , Senta Georgia, Martín G. Martín
R. Sergio Solorzano-Vargas, … , Senta Georgia, Martín G. Martín
Published December 5, 2019
Citation Information: JCI Insight. 2020;5(1):e127657. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.127657.
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Research Article Endocrinology Gastroenterology

Null mutations of NEUROG3 are associated with delayed-onset diabetes mellitus

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Abstract

Biallelic mutations of the gene encoding the transcription factor NEUROG3 are associated with a rare disorder that presents in neonates as generalized malabsorption — due to a complete absence of enteroendocrine cells — followed, in early childhood or beyond, by insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM). The commonly delayed onset of IDDM suggests a differential requirement for NEUROG3 in endocrine cell generation in the human pancreas versus the intestine. However, previously identified human mutations were hypomorphic and, hence, may have had residual function in pancreas. We report 2 patients with biallelic functionally null variants of the NEUROG3 gene who nonetheless did not present with IDDM during infancy but instead developed permanent IDDM during middle childhood ages. The variants showed no evidence of function in traditional promoter-based assays of NEUROG3 function and also failed to exhibit function in a variety of potentially novel in vitro and in vivo molecular assays designed to discern residual NEUROG3 function. These findings imply that, unlike in mice, pancreatic endocrine cell generation in humans is not entirely dependent on NEUROG3 expression and, hence, suggest the presence of unidentified redundant in vivo pathways in human pancreas capable of yielding β cell mass sufficient to maintain euglycemia until early childhood.

Authors

R. Sergio Solorzano-Vargas, Matthew Bjerknes, Jiafang Wang, S. Vincent Wu, Manuel G. Garcia-Careaga, Pisit Pitukcheewanont, Hazel Cheng, Michael S. German, Senta Georgia, Martín G. Martín

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Usage data is cumulative from December 2024 through December 2025.

Usage JCI PMC
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PDF 92 21
Figure 333 3
Table 37 0
Supplemental data 49 12
Citation downloads 117 0
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Total Views 1,222
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