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Proinsulin misfolding and diabetes: mutant INS gene-induced diabetes of youth.

Trends in endocrinology and metabolism: TEM (2010-08-21)
Ming Liu, Israel Hodish, Leena Haataja, Roberto Lara-Lemus, Gautam Rajpal, Jordan Wright, Peter Arvan
RESUMEN

Type 1B diabetes (typically with early onset and without islet autoantibodies) has been described in patients bearing small coding sequence mutations in the INS gene. Not all mutations in the INS gene cause the autosomal dominant Mutant INS-gene Induced Diabetes of Youth (MIDY) syndrome, but most missense mutations affecting proinsulin folding produce MIDY. MIDY patients are heterozygotes, with the expressed mutant proinsulins exerting dominant-negative (toxic gain of function) behavior in pancreatic beta cells. Here we focus primarily on proinsulin folding in the endoplasmic reticulum, providing insight into perturbations of this folding pathway in MIDY. Accumulated evidence indicates that, in the molecular pathogenesis of the disease, misfolded proinsulin exerts dominant effects that initially inhibit insulin production, progressing to beta cell demise with diabetes.

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Insulina human, recombinant, expressed in yeast, γ-irradiated, suitable for cell culture