single gene defects causing NIDDM
Last reviewed 02/2023
The following gene defects have been associated with rare inherited forms of NIDDM:
- insulin:
- autosomal dominant
- very rare
- insulin produced is inactive
- most insulin mutations do not cause diabetes
- insulin receptor:
- autosomal dominant or recessive
- characterised by severe insulin resistance
- glucokinase:
- autosomal dominant
- impairs insulin secretion
- causes mild but early onset NIDDM (MODY 2)
- HNF-1 alpha:
- hepatocyte nuclear factor 1 alpha gene
- autosomal dominant
- rare & progressive early onset NIDDM (MODY 3)
- HNF-4 alpha:
- hepatocyte nuclear antigen 4 alpha gene
- autosomal dominant
- very rare & progressive early onset NIDDM (MODY 1)
- mitochondrial leucine tRNA:
- maternal inheritance
- mutation at nucleotide 3243
- impaired insulin secretion
- account for up to 1% of all NIDDM patients
- may be associated with deafness, MELAS and CEO
Reference:
- O'Rahilly, S. (1997). Non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus: the gathering storm. BMJ. 314, 955-9.
- Johns, DR. (1996). The other human genome: mitochondrial DNA and disease. Nature Medicine, 2(10), 1065-8.