Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (diabetes)
277,896 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Hereditary diabetes insipidus can occur in two forms: the first, referred to as central diabetes insipidus, is responsive to vasopressin whereas the second, termed nephrogenic diabetes insipidus, is resistant to treatment. Recent advances in molecular genetics have contributed to elucidate the pathogenesis of these affections. Familial central diabetes insipidus depicts two unsimilar illnesses. The first, characterized by an autosomal dominant transmission, is of delayed onset and worsens progressively all through life. It is related to a heterozygous mutation of the vasopressin precursor gene mainly involving either the sequence encoding for the signal peptide or the one encoding for neurophysin II, the hormone carrier protein. Mutations described to date are responsible for impairment of vasopressin precursor transportation and processing. Therefore mutant protein accumulates in the posterior pituitary which is involved in the persistant bright spot seen on magnetic resonance imaging. The second illness or Wolfram syndrome, autosomal recessive, associates obligatory features: insulin-dependant diabetes, bilateral optic atrophy and more inconstantly: diabetes insipidus, deafness, genito-urinary and neuropsychiatric disturbances. The cause of this syndrome, still unknown, may involve mitochondrial ADN mutations. Familial nephrogenic diabetes insipidus, of neonatal onset, are mainly X-linked and associated to mutations in the V2 receptor gene. About 60 mutations have been described until now. Some rare cases, transmission of which is autosomal recessive, result from homozygous mutations of aquaporin 2 gene, a water channel involved in the water reabsorption in the renal collecting duct. Other mutations will be probably discovered in future. In conclusion, familial diabetes insipidus constitutes an interesting pathogenic model because it may be explained by impairment of vasopressin gene precursor as well as by abnormalities of renal receptor or post receptor mechanisms of the hormone.
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PMID:[Congenital diabetes insipidus. Recent advances in molecular genetics]. 868 70

Familial central diabetes insipidus is an inherited disease of predominant autosomal dominant trait characterized by a deficiency of arginine vasopressin. The arginine vasopressin-neurophysin II ( AVP-NPII) gene consists of three exons and is located on chromosome 20p13 encoding for the precursor protein of AVP. We investigated two Caucasian families with a typical autosomal dominant trait of familial central diabetes insipidus, defined by deficiency of arginine vasopressin. After PCR amplification of exon 1 and exon 2/3, fragments were pooled and purified. Nucleotide sequencing was performed with the Taq DyeDeoxy-terminator cycle sequencing method using nested primers. Two mutations in the coding region of NPII were identified. In family C we found a heterozygous G ==> C missense mutation (AA61) in exon 2 leading to the substitution of cystein with serine. In family D a novel heterozygous nonsense mutation in exon 3 (AA 83, GAG ==> TAG) was indentified, leading to a stop codon instead of glutamine. Both mutations were confirmed by restriction analysis and were found in all affected but not in healthy family members or control subjects. We therefore have identified a missense mutation of the AVP-NPII gene and a novel mutation predicting a truncated protein.
Exp Clin Endocrinol Diabetes 2002 May
PMID:Identification of a novel mutation in the arginine vasopressin-neurophysin II gene in familial central diabetes insipidus. 1201 74