Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (diabetes)
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Wolfram syndrome (WS) is an autosomal recessive neurodegenerative disease mainly characterized by familial diabetes mellitus and optic atrophy. WS patients frequently present with other clinical features such as diabetes insipidus, renal abnormalities, psychiatric disorders, and a variety of neurologic symptoms: deafness, ataxia, peripheral neuropathy. A gene responsible for Wolfram Syndrome (WFS1) has been recently identified on chromosome 4p16.1. Twenty-two Wolfram patients from 16 Spanish families were screened for mutations in the WFS1 coding region by SSCP analysis and direct sequencing. Since WS has been considered a mitochondrial disorder for some time, mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) in these families was also examined. WFS1 mutations were detected in 75% of families (12 of 16). One of these mutations, an insertion of 16 base pairs in exon 4, turned out to be notably frequent in Spanish pedigrees. As many as 50% of pedigrees with WFS1 mutations harbored this insertion, either in one (33% of cases) or in two chromosomes (67%). Ten other mutations were identified: 7 missense changes, 2 deletions, and 1 nonsense mutation. Only 3 of these changes had been previously described in non-Spanish pedigrees. Large mtDNA rearrangements and LHON point mutations were detected in four and six families, respectively. No correlation could be established between WFS1 gene mutations and specific point mutations or rearrangements in mtDNA. We would suggest first screening for the 16-bp insertion in exon 4 when a new Spanish WS case is reported.
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PMID:Presence of a major WFS1 mutation in Spanish Wolfram syndrome pedigrees. 1116 32

Wolfram (DIDMOAD) syndrome is an autosomal recessive neurodegenerative disorder accompanied by insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus and progressive optic atrophy. Recent positional cloning led to identification of the WFS1 (Wolfram syndrome 1) gene, a member of a novel gene family of unknown function. In this study, we generated a specific antibody against the C-terminus of the WFS1 protein and investigated its subcellular localization in cultured cells. We also studied its distribution in the rat brain. Biochemical studies indicated the WFS1 protein to be an integral, endoglycosidase H-sensitive membrane glycoprotein that localizes primarily in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). Consistent with this, immunofluorescence cell staining of overexpressed WFS1 showed a characteristic reticular pattern over the cytoplasm and overlapped with the ER marker staining. No co-localization of WFS1 with mitochondria argues against an earlier clinical hypothesis that Wolfram syndrome is a mitochondria-mediated disorder. In the rat brain, at both the protein and mRNA level, WFS1 was found to be present predominantly in selected neurons in the hippocampus CA1, amygdaloid areas, olfactory tubercle and superficial layer of the allocortex. These expression sites, i.e. components of the limbic system or structures closely associated with this system, may be involved in the psychiatric, behavioral and emotional abnormalities characteristic of this syndrome. ER localization of WFS1 suggests that this protein plays an as yet undefined role in membrane trafficking, protein processing and/or regulation of ER calcium homeostasis. These studies represent a first step toward the characterization of WFS1 protein, which presumably functions to maintain certain populations of neuronal and endocrine cells.
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PMID:WFS1 (Wolfram syndrome 1) gene product: predominant subcellular localization to endoplasmic reticulum in cultured cells and neuronal expression in rat brain. 1118 71

Wolfram syndrome(DIDMOAD syndrome) is an autosomal recessive neurodegenerative disorder characterized by juvenile-onset, insulin-requiring diabetes mellitus and optic atrophy. Other symptoms including diabetes insipidus, neurosensory deafness, urinary tract and neurological abnormalities are often accompanied. In patients, beta-cells are selectively lost from their pancreatic islets of Langerhans. The gene was previously mapped to 4p16.1. By haplotype analysis and recombination mapping in 5 families, we localized the gene within a region less than 250 kb on chromosome 6p. In the region, we identified a novel gene(WFS1) encoding a putative transmembrane protein. Mutations were identified in all affected members of the families and these mutations were associated with disease phenotype. This finding was further confirmed by other investigators and to date, more than 50 mutations were identified in the WFS1 gene from the patients with Wolfram syndrome. The WFS1 gene encodes a protein of 100.3 kDa with 9 to 10 putative transmembrane domains. The protein appears to be important in the survival and maintenance of normal pancreatic beta-cells and neurons. Physiological function of the WFS1 protein and mechanisms by which defective WFS1 lead to the development of Wolfram syndrome need to be clarified.
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PMID:[Positional cloning of the gene(WFS1) for Wolfram syndrome]. 1121 8

Wolfram syndrome (WS) is the inherited association of juvenile-onset insulin-dependant diabetes mellitus and progressive bilateral optic atrophy. A nuclear gene, WFS1/wolframin, was identified that segregated with disease status and demonstrated an autosomal recessive mode of inheritance. Mutation analysis of the WFS1 gene in WS patients has identified mutations in 90% of patients. Most were compound heterozygotes with private mutations distributed throughout the gene with no obvious hotspots. The private nature of the mutations in WS patients and the low frequencies make it difficult to determine the biological or clinical relevance of these mutations. Mutation screening in patients with psychiatric disorders or diabetes mellitus has also been performed to test the hypothesis that heterozygous carriers of WFS1 gene mutations are at an increased risk following the observation that WS first-degree relatives have a higher frequency of these disorders. Most studies showed no association, however two missense mutations were identified that demonstrated significant association with psychiatric disorders and diabetes mellitus. Population association studies and functional studies of these variants will need to be performed to confirm these preliminary results. The elucidation of functions and functional pathways for the WFS1 gene product and variants will shed light on the effect of such disparate mutations on gene function and their role in the resulting clinical phenotype in WS and associated disorders.
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PMID:WFS1/wolframin mutations, Wolfram syndrome, and associated diseases. 1131 50

Non-syndromic low frequency sensorineural hearing loss (LFSNHL) affecting only 2000 Hz and below is an unusual type of hearing loss that worsens over time without progressing to profound deafness. This type of LFSNHL may be associated with mild tinnitus but is not associated with vertigo. We have previously reported two families with autosomal dominant LFSNHL linked to adjacent but non-overlapping loci on 4p16, DFNA6 and DFNA14. However, further study revealed that an individual with LFSNHL in the DFNA6 family who had a recombination event that excluded the DFNA14 candidate region was actually a phenocopy, and consequently, DFNA6 and DFNA14 are allelic. LFSNHL appears to be genetically nearly homogeneous, as only one LFSNHL family is known to map to a different chromosome (DFNA1). The DFNA6/14 critical region includes WFS1, the gene responsible for Wolfram syndrome, an autosomal recessive disorder characterized by diabetes mellitus and optic atrophy, and often, deafness. Herein we report five different heterozygous missense mutations (T699M, A716T, V779M, L829P, G831D) in the WFS1 gene found in six LFSNHL families. Mutations in WFS1 were identified in all LFSNHL families tested, with A716T arising independently in two families. None of the mutations was found in at least 220 control chromosomes with the exception of V779M, which was identified in 1/336 controls. This frequency is consistent with the prevalence of heterozygous carriers for Wolfram syndrome estimated at 0.3-1%. An increased risk of sensorineural hearing loss has been reported in such carriers. Therefore, we conclude that mutations in WFS1 are a common cause of LFSNHL.
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PMID:Mutations in the Wolfram syndrome 1 gene (WFS1) are a common cause of low frequency sensorineural hearing loss. 1170 37

Dominantly inherited progressive hearing loss DFNA38 is caused by heterozygosity for a novel mutation in WFS1, the gene for recessively inherited Wolfram syndrome. Wolfram syndrome is defined by juvenile diabetes mellitus and optic atrophy and may include progressive hearing loss and other neurological symptoms. Heterozygotes for other Wolfram syndrome mutations generally have normal hearing. Dominant deafness defined by DFNA38 is more severe than deafness of Wolfram syndrome patients and lacks any syndromic features. In a six-generation kindred from Newfoundland, Canada, WFS1 Ala716Thr (2146 G-->A) was shared by all deaf members of the family and was specific to deaf individuals. The causal relationship between this missense mutation and deafness was supported by two observations based on haplotype and mutation analysis of the kindred. First, a relative homozygous for the mutation was diagnosed at age 3 years with insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus, the central feature of Wolfram syndrome. Second, two relatives with normal hearing had an identical haplotype to that defining DFNA38, with the exception of the base pair at position 2146. Other rare variants of WFS1 co-inherited with deafness in the family could be excluded as disease-causing mutations on the basis of this hearing-associated haplotype. The possibility that 'mild' mutations in WFS1 might be a cause of non-syndromic deafness in the general population should be explored.
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PMID:Non-syndromic progressive hearing loss DFNA38 is caused by heterozygous missense mutation in the Wolfram syndrome gene WFS1. 1170 38

Mutations in the WFS1 gene cause beta-cell death, resulting in a monogenic form of diabetes known as Wolfram syndrome. The role of variation in WFS1 in type 2 diabetes susceptibility is not known. We sequenced the WFS1 gene in 29 type 2 diabetic probands and identified 12 coding variants. We used 152 parent-offspring trios to look for familial association; the R allele at residue 456 (P = 0.04) and the H allele at residue 611 (P = 0.05) as well as the R456-H611 haplotype (P = 0.032) were overtransmitted to affected offspring from heterozygous parents. In a further cohort of 327 type 2 diabetic subjects and 357 normoglycemic control subjects, the H611 allele and the R456-H611 haplotype were present in more type 2 diabetic subjects than control subjects (one-tailed P = 0.06 and P = 0.023, respectively). In a combined analysis, the H611 allele was present in 60% of all diabetes chromosomes and 55% of all control chromosomes (odds ratio [OR] 1.24 [95% CI 1.03-1.48], P = 0.02), and the R456-H611 haplotype was significantly more frequent in type 2 diabetic subjects than in control subjects (60 vs. 54%, OR 1.29 [95% CI 1.08-1.54], P = 0.0053). Our results provide the first evidence that variation in the WFS1 gene may influence susceptibility to type 2 diabetes.
Diabetes 2002 Apr
PMID:Association studies of genetic variation in the WFS1 gene and type 2 diabetes in U.K. populations. 1191 57

Wolfram syndrome patients are mainly characterised by juvenile onset diabetes mellitus and optic atrophy. A synonym is the acronym DIDMOAD: diabetes insipidus, diabetes mellitus, optic atrophy, deafness. Diabetes insipidus and sensorineural high-frequency hearing impairment are important additional features. This rare autosomal recessively inherited neurodegenerative syndrome is caused by mainly inactivating mutations in the WFS1 gene. It is located at chromosome 4p16 and encodes wolframin, a transmembrane protein. No function has yet been ascribed to this protein.
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PMID:[From gene to disease; mutations in the WFS1-gene as the cause of juvenile type I diabetes mellitus with optic atrophy (Wolfram syndrome)]. 1205 30

Hereditary hearing impairment is an extremely heterogeneous trait, with more than 70 identified loci. Only two of these loci are associated with an auditory phenotype that predominantly affects the low frequencies (DFNA1 and DFNA6/14). In this study, we have completed mutation screening of the WFS1 gene in eight autosomal dominant families and twelve sporadic cases in which affected persons have low-frequency sensorineural hearing impairment (LFSNHI). Mutations in this gene are known to be responsible for Wolfram syndrome or DIDMOAD (diabetes insipidus, diabetes mellitus, optic atrophy, and deafness), which is an autosomal recessive trait. We have identified seven missense mutations and a single amino acid deletion affecting conserved amino acids in six families and one sporadic case, indicating that mutations in WFS1 are a major cause of inherited but not sporadic low-frequency hearing impairment. Among the ten WFS1 mutations reported in LFSNHI, none is expected to lead to premature protein truncation, and nine cluster in the C-terminal protein domain. In contrast, 64% of the Wolfram syndrome mutations are inactivating. Our results indicate that only non-inactivating mutations in WFS1 are responsible for non-syndromic low-frequency hearing impairment.
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PMID:Mutations in the WFS1 gene that cause low-frequency sensorineural hearing loss are small non-inactivating mutations. 1207 7

Wolfram syndrome (WS) is an autosomal recessive neurodegenerative disorder characterised by early onset diabetes mellitus and progressive optic atrophy, as well as other clinical features such as deafness, diabetes insipida, renal tract abnormalities and diverse psychiatric illnesses. A gene responsible for WS was identified in 4p16.1 (WFS1). It encodes a putative 890 amino acid transmembrane protein expressed in a wide spectrum of tissues. Recently, a new locus for WS has been located on 4q22-24, providing additional evidence for the genetic heterogeneity of this syndrome. We have studied the presence of WFS1 variants in three groups of individuals: patients with diabetes mellitus, patients with deafness and patients with both conditions. A fourth group of healthy subjects was used as control. We have identified a total of 18 nucleotide changes in the WFS1 gene: three mutations and 15 polymorphisms. Six of these changes were previously undescribed. Four of the 15 polymorphisms studied among the patients group present statistical differences in the allelic and genotypic distribution when comparing affected vs control groups.
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PMID:WFS1 mutations in Spanish patients with diabetes mellitus and deafness. 1210 16


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