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Query: UMLS:C0011849 (
diabetes
)
277,896
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
ATP-sensitive K+ (KATP) channels play a key role in stimulus-secretion coupling in pancreatic beta-cells. Recent studies have shown that the beta-cell KATP channel comprises two subunits: a novel member of the inwardly rectifying K+ channel family, designated
BIR
and expressed at highest levels in pancreatic islets, and the sulfonylurea receptor (SUR). Moreover, the genes encoding these two proteins are adjacent to one another on human chromosome 11. Genetic factors contribute to the development of NIDDM, and it seems likely that mutations in genes encoding proteins involved in insulin secretion or action may contribute to NIDDM susceptibility. The present study examined the contribution of the linked
BIR
and SUR genes to the development of NIDDM. These genes were localized to the same yeast artificial chromosome as two microsatellite DNA polymorphisms, D11S902 and D11S921. These microsatellite DNA polymorphisms were typed in 140 Japanese NIDDM-affected sib pairs. There was no evidence for linkage between these markers and NIDDM, suggesting that genetic variation in the
BIR
and SUR genes does not play a major role in susceptibility to NIDDM in Japanese.
Diabetes
1996 Feb
PMID:Identification of microsatellite markers near the human genes encoding the beta-cell ATP-sensitive K+ channel and linkage studies with NIDDM in Japanese. 854 73
The ATP-sensitive potassium channel of insulin-secreting pancreatic beta-cells is a complex of
Kir6.2
, a member of the inwardly rectifying potassium channel superfamily, and the sulfonylurea receptor. We have isolated cDNA clones encoding rat
Kir6.2
. Co-expression of rat
Kir6.2
and sulfonylurea receptor in human embryonic kidney cells generated a potassium current with the properties of the beta-cell ATP-sensitive potassium channel. A quantitative reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction assay indicated that
Kir6.2
and sulfonylurea receptor mRNAs were abundantly expressed in rat islets and that expression of
Kir6.2
mRNA was reduced by >70% in islets from Zucker diabetic fatty male rats, whereas there was no significant change in sulfonylurea receptor mRNA levels. Thus, decreased expression of
Kir6.2
could contribute to the beta-cell dysfunction which characterizes
diabetes mellitus
in this animal model.
...
PMID:Rat inwardly rectifying potassium channel Kir6.2: cloning electrophysiological characterization, and decreased expression in pancreatic islets of male Zucker diabetic fatty rats. 860
NIDDM is a common heterogeneous disorder, the genetic basis of which has yet to be determined. The sulfonylurea receptor (SUR) gene, now known to encode an integral component of the pancreatic beta-cell ATP-sensitive potassium channel,
IKATP
, was investigated as a logical candidate for this disorder. The two nucleotide-binding fold (NBF) regions of SUR are known to be critical for normal glucose regulation of insulin secretion. Thus, single-strand conformational polymorphism analysis was used to find sequence changes in the two NBF regions of the SUR gene in 35 NIDDM patients. Eight variants were found; and three were evaluated in two Northern European white populations (Utah and the U.K.): 1) a missense mutation in exon 7 (S1370A) was found with equal frequency in patients (n = 223) and control subjects (n = 322); 2) an ACC-->ACT silent variant in exon 22 (T761T) was more common in patients than in control subjects (allele frequencies 0.07 vs. 0.02, P = 0.0008, odds ratio (OR) 3.01, 95% CI 1.54-5.87); and 3) an intronic t-->c change located at position -3 of the exon 24 splice acceptor site was also more common in patients than in control subjects (0.62 vs. 0.46, P < 0.0001, OR 1.91, 95% Cl 1.50-2.44). The combined genotypes of exon 22 C/T or T/T and intron 24 -3c/-3c occurred in 8.9% of patients and 0.5% of control subjects (P < 0.0001, OR 21.5, 95% CI 2.91-159.6). These results suggest that defects at the SUR locus may be a major contributor to the inherited basis of NIDDM in Northern European Caucasians.
Diabetes
1996 Jun
PMID:Sequence variants in the sulfonylurea receptor (SUR) gene are associated with NIDDM in Caucasians. 863 61
ATP-sensitive inwardly rectifying potassium channels are expressed in a variety of tissues, including heart, skeletal, and smooth muscle, and pancreatic beta-cells. Physiological and pharmacological studies suggest the presence of distinct KATP channels in these tissues. Recently, the KATP channel of beta-cells has been reconstituted in functional form by coexpression of SUR, the sulfonylurea-binding protein, and the inwardly rectifying K+ channel subunit,
KIR6.2
. In this article, we describe the isolation of cDNAs encoding SUR-like proteins from mouse, SUR2A and SUR2B. Northern blotting showed that the highest expression of the SUR2 isoforms is in the heart and skeletal muscle, with lower levels in all other tissues. By reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction, SUR2B is ubiquitously expressed, while the apparently alternatively spliced variant, SUR2A, is expressed exclusively in heart. In situ hybridization shows that the SUR2 isoforms are expressed in the parenchyma of the heart and skeletal muscle and in the vascular structures of other tissues. Human SUR2 was localized to chromosome 12, p12.1 by fluorescent in situ hybridization. The structure of the predicted protein and expression pattern of SUR2 suggests that it is the drug-binding channel-modulating subunit of the extrapancreatic KATP channel. Differences in sequence between SUR and between SUR2 isoforms may underlie the tissue-specific pharmacology of the KATP channel.
Diabetes
1996 Oct
PMID:Cloning, tissue expression, and chromosomal localization of SUR2, the putative drug-binding subunit of cardiac, skeletal muscle, and vascular KATP channels. 882 84
The ATP-sensitive K-channel plays a central role in insulin release from pancreatic beta cells. This channel consists of two subunits: a sulphonyl-urea receptor, SUR1, and an inwardly rectifying K-channel subunit,
Kir6.2
. We screened 135 white Caucasian patients with non-insulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
(NIDDM) and 90 non-diabetic subjects for mutations in the
Kir6.2
gene by single-stranded conformational polymorphism (SSCP) analysis. We identified one silent mutation (A190A) and four missense mutations (E23K, L270V, I337V and S385C) in normal and diabetic individuals. In a single diabetic subject, we identified a two-amino acid insertion (380KP). We also screened 39 Afro-Caribbean diabetic subjects and identified one additional missense (L355P) and one more silent (S363S) mutation. The E23K and I337V variants were completely linked. The common variants (E23K, 1337V and L270V) were found with similar frequency in diabetic and normal subjects. Diabetic subjects with the variants responded normally to sulphonylurea therapy. When mutant
Kir6.2
subunits were coexpressed with SUR1 in Xenopus oocytes, there was no difference in the sensitivity of the whole-cell currents to metabolic inhibition or to the sulphonylurea tolbutamide. We therefore conclude that mutations in
Kir6.2
are unlikely to be a major cause of NIDDM.
...
PMID:Sequence variations in the human Kir6.2 gene, a subunit of the beta-cell ATP-sensitive K-channel: no association with NIDDM in while Caucasian subjects or evidence of abnormal function when expressed in vitro. 889 13
Signals derived from the metabolism of glucose in pancreatic beta-cells lead to insulin secretion via the closure of ATP-sensitive K+ channels (KATP). The cloning of the gene encoding the beta-cell inward rectifier
Kir6.2
(Bir), a subunit of the beta-cell KATP channel, provided the opportunity to look for mutations in this gene that might contribute to the impaired insulin secretion of NIDDM. By single-strand conformational polymorphism (SSCP) analysis on 35 Northern-European Caucasian patients with NIDDM, six sequence variants were detected: Glu10gag-->Lys10aag (E1OK), Glu23gag-->Lys23aag (E23K), Leu270ctg-->Val270gtg (L270V), Ile337atc-->Val337gtc (I337V), and two silent mutations. Allelic frequencies for the missense variants were compared between the NIDDM group (n = 306) and nondiabetic control subjects (n = 175) and did not differ between the two groups. Pairwise allelic associations indicated significant linkage disequilibrium between the variants in
Kir6.2
and between them and a nearby pancreatic beta-cell sulfonylurea receptor (SUR1) missense variant (S1370A), but these linkage disequilibria did not differ between the NIDDM and control groups. The results of these studies thus revealed that mutations in the coding region of
Kir6.2
1) were not responsible for the previously noted association of the SUR1 variants with NIDDM (Inoue H et al.,
Diabetes
45:825-831, 1996) and 2) did not contribute to the impaired insulin secretion characteristic of NIDDM in Caucasian patients.
Diabetes
1997 Mar
PMID:Sequence variants in the pancreatic islet beta-cell inwardly rectifying K+ channel Kir6.2 (Bir) gene: identification and lack of role in Caucasian patients with NIDDM. 903 9
Kir6.2
is an inwardly rectifying potassium channel that is expressed in pancreatic beta-cells and cardiac and skeletal muscle. Expressed together with the high-affinity sulphonylurea receptor, it reconstitutes a sulphonylurea- and also ATP-sensitive potassium channel resembling the native beta-cell channel. The objective of this study was to search for mutations in the
Kir6.2
gene that might be associated with NIDDM or related to altered insulin secretion, insulin action, or glucose metabolism in healthy subjects. Using polymerase chain reaction-single-strand conformation polymorphism analysis (PCR-SSCP) on genomic DNA from 69 Danish NIDDM patients and 66 matched control subjects, we report the finding of three missense polymorphisms in otherwise conserved codons and three silent polymorphisms in the gene encoding
Kir6.2
: codon 23 (GAG/AAG), Glu-->Lys; codon 190 (GCT/GCC), Ala-->Ala; codon 267 (CTC/CTG), Leu-->Leu; codon 270 (CTG/GTG), Leu-->Val; codon 337 (ATC/GTC), Ile-->Val; codon 381 (AAG/AAA), Lys-->Lys. The codon 23 and codon 337 amino acid polymorphisms were always coupled. The allelic frequencies of the polymorphisms were similar in NIDDM patients and control subjects. The amino acid polymorphisms were not associated with altered insulin secretion after intravenous glucose or tolbutamide injections or with altered glucose effectiveness in a phenotype study of 346 young healthy subjects. However, carriers of the maximal load of amino acid variants, the compound homozygous codon 23/337 and heterozygous codon 270, had on average a 62% higher insulin sensitivity index (P = 0.006), compared with noncarriers. We conclude that a combination of common
Kir6.2
amino acid variants may contribute to the genetic background behind the large variation of the insulin sensitivity index in the general population.
Diabetes
1997 Mar
PMID:Amino acid polymorphisms in the ATP-regulatable inward rectifier Kir6.2 and their relationships to glucose- and tolbutamide-induced insulin secretion, the insulin sensitivity index, and NIDDM. 903 10
Persistent hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia of infancy (PHHI), a rare disorder due to defective negative feedback regulation of insulin secretion by low glucose levels, is often familial. Most cases are recessively inherited, and mutations of the sulfonylurea receptor gene (SUR) or the closely linked
KIR6.2
gene have been found in several families. Both of these genes encode components of the potassium channels responsible for glucose-regulated insulin release. However, in some families recessive PHHI is not linked to the SUR-
KIR6.2
locus, suggesting genetic heterogeneity. We report here a French Canadian kindred with hypoglycemia in five first cousins. All five patients had documented hypoglycemia, and all responded well to diazoxide. In two, inappropriately elevated insulin levels during hypoglycemia were documented. This familial clustering strongly suggests the existence of an autosomal dominant form of PHHI. By preliminary linkage analysis, we tested the possibility of a dominant negative SUR or
KIR6.2
mutant. The insulin (INS) and glucokinase (GCK) genes were also tested as additional candidates. Microsatellite markers closely linked to each gene were used, and large negative Lod scores were obtained at the known recombination fractions between all three genes studied and the corresponding marker. We conclude that mutation of a gene other than SUR or
KIR6.2
is responsible for the dominant PHHI in this family, and this gene cannot be INS or GCK. We propose that a genome-wide search for this gene is important for elucidating this rare disorder and, more importantly, for determining its potential impact on understanding noninsulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
and on the effort to develop bioengineered beta-cells for transplantation.
...
PMID:An autosomal dominant form of familial persistent hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia of infancy, not linked to the sulfonylurea receptor locus. 910 May 95
Kir6.2
, a member of the inward rectifier K+ channel family, is a component of the ATP-sensitive K+ (K[ATP]) channel considered to play a key role in glucose-induced insulin secretion. We studied the distribution of
Kir6.2
in mouse pancreas at the cellular level. The sites of
Kir6.2
mRNA expression were determined by in situ hybridization histochemistry with a digoxigenin (DIG)-labeled antisense cRNA probe. The hybridization signal was unevenly present throughout the islets of Langerhans, while no distinct signal was detected in exocrine acinar cells. This distribution was confirmed by another cRNA probe complementary to a different region of
Kir6.2
mRNA. In situ hybridization and immunofluorescence staining of serial sections with the anti-insulin, the anti-glucagon, and the anti-somatostatin antibodies showed
Kir6.2
mRNA to be present in alpha-, beta-, and delta-cells. Furthermore, immunofluorescence staining with antibody raised against
Kir6.2
revealed that
Kir6.2
protein is localized within the pancreatic islets and is not found in exocrine pancreas.
Kir6.2
was further shown to be located together with insulin, glucagon, or somatostatin. The positive staining of
Kir6.2
appeared concentrated along the contour of each islet cell, suggesting that
Kir6.2
is at the plasma membrane of islet cells. These results suggest that
Kir6.2
, as a component of K(ATP) channels, is an important molecule in the regulation of all the release of insulin, glucagon, and somatostatin.
Diabetes
1997 Sep
PMID:Localization of the ATP-sensitive K+ channel subunit Kir6.2 in mouse pancreas. 928 44
The ATP-sensitive K+-channel (KATP channel) plays a key role in insulin secretion from pancreatic beta cells. It is closed both by glucose metabolism and the sulfonylurea drugs that are used in the treatment of noninsulin-dependent
diabetes mellitus
, thereby initiating a membrane depolarization that activates voltage-dependent Ca2+ entry and insulin release. The beta cell KATP channel is a complex of two proteins:
Kir6.2
and SUR1. The former is an ATP-sensitive K+-selective pore, whereas SUR1 is a channel regulator that endows
Kir6.2
with sensitivity to sulfonylureas. A number of drugs containing an imidazoline moiety, such as phentolamine, also act as potent stimulators of insulin secretion, but their mechanism of action is unknown. We have used a truncated form of
Kir6.2
, which expresses independently of SUR1, to show that phentolamine does not inhibit KATP channels by interacting with SUR1. Instead, our results argue that phentolamine may interact directly with
Kir6.2
to produce a voltage-independent reduction in channel activity. The single-channel conductance is unaffected. Although the ATP molecule also contains an imidazoline group, the site at which phentolamine blocks is not identical to the ATP-inhibitory site, because phentolamine block of an ATP-insensitive mutant (K185Q) is normal. KATP channels also are found in the heart where they are involved in the response to cardiac ischemia: they also are blocked by phentolamine. Our results suggest that this may be because
Kir6.2
, which is expressed in the heart, forms the pore of the cardiac KATP channel.
...
PMID:Phentolamine block of KATP channels is mediated by Kir6.2. 932 76
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