These results broaden the spectrum of diabetes phenotypes caused by mutations of KCNJ11 and suggest that mutations in this gene should be taken into consideration for not only permanent neonatal diabetes but also other forms of diabetes with milder phenotypes and later onset.
Mutations in the gene coding for hepatocyte nuclear factor-1beta (HNF-1beta) have been known to cause a form of maturity-onset diabetes of the young (MODY5), which is usually characterized by dominantly inherited adolescence-onset diabetes mellitus associated with renal cysts. This report, however, describes recurrence of a novel missense mutation in the HNF-1beta gene, S148W (C443G), in two sibs, one with neonatal diabetes mellitus and the other with neonatal polycystic, dysplastic kidneys leading to early renal failure. The former patient had only a few small renal cysts with normal renal functions, and the latter had only a transient episode of hyperglycemia, which resolved spontaneously. Interestingly, both parents were clinically unaffected, and PCR restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis showed that the mother was a low-level mosaic of normal and mutant HNF-1beta, which suggested that the recurrence was caused by germline mosaicism. This is the first report of permanent neonatal diabetes mellitus caused by a mutation of the HNF-1beta gene as well as the first report of germline mosaicism of this gene. In addition, the two cases described here show that additional factors, genetic or environmental, can have a significant influence on the phenotypic expression of HNF-1beta mutations.
Carbamoylphosphate synthetase I deficiency (CPS1D) is a urea-cycle disorder characterized by episodes of life-threatening hyperammonemia. Correct diagnosis is crucial for patient management, but is difficult to make from clinical presentation and conventional laboratory tests alone. Enzymatic or genetic diagnoses have also been hampered by difficult access to the appropriate organ and the large size of the gene (38 exons). In this study, in order to address this diagnostic dilemma, we performed the largest 349-354 DOI 10.1007/s10038-007-0122-9 mutational and clinical analyses of this disorder to date in Japan. Mutations in CPS1 were identified in 16 of 18 patients with a clinical diagnosis of CPS1D. In total, 25 different mutations were identified, of which 19 were novel. Interestingly, in contrast to previous reports suggesting an extremely diverse mutational spectrum, 31.8% of the mutations identified in Japanese were common to more than one family. We also identified two common polymorphisms that might be useful for simple linkage analysis in prenatal diagnosis. The accumulated clinical data will also help to reveal the clinical presentation of this rare disorder in Japan.
Citrin deficiency is a common congenital metabolic defect not only in East Asian populations but also in other populations around the world. It has been shown that although liver transplantation is ultimately required in many patients to prevent neurological decompensation associated with hyperammonaemia, arginine is effective in lowering ammonia in hyperammonaemic patients, and a high-protein low-carbohydrate diet may provide some benefit to infants in improving failure to thrive. In the present study, the clinical symptoms and laboratory findings are reported for a 13-year-old citrin-deficient girl in the early stage of adult-onset type II citrullinaemia (CTLN2), and the therapeutic effect of orally administered arginine and sodium pyruvate was investigated. The patient complained of anorexia, lethargy, fatigue and poor growth, and showed laboratory findings typical of CTLN2; elevated levels of plasma citrulline, threonine-to-serine ratio, and serum pancreatic secretory trypsin inhibitor. Oral administration of arginine and sodium pyruvate for over 3 years improved her clinical symptoms and has almost completely normalized her laboratory findings. It is suggested that the administration of arginine and sodium pyruvate with low-carbohydrate meals may be an effective therapy in patients with citrin deficiency in order either to prolong metabolic normalcy or to provide a safer and more affordable alternative to liver transplantation.
We investigated serum levels of interferon alpha, interferon gamma, tumour necrosis factor alpha, interleukin-2 (IL-2) and interleukin-6 (IL-6) in patients with necrotizing lymphadenitis (Kikuchi's disease) (NL). Four male patients, diagnosed as having NL following biopsy of the affected lymph nodes and by the clinical course, were included in this study. All four patients had higher than normal serum interferon gamma and IL-6 levels during the acute phase, which returned to normal levels during the convalescent phase. Interferon alpha, tumour necrosis factor alpha and IL-2 were, however, within the normal ranges. Our findings indicate the possibility that interferon gamma and IL-6 may play an important role in the pathogenesis of NL.
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