“…Consequently, these patients suffer from severe exocrine pancreatic insufficiency and neonatal diabetes due to the absence of insulin-secreting endocrine β cells. Further studies have identified heterozygous GATA6 patients with a wide spectrum of phenotypes ranging from non-diabetic, mildly diabetic in adults, to severely diabetic with no pancreas in newborns, and marked phenotypic variability is observed even among affected members of the same family (Bonnefond et al, 2012; Catli et al, 2013; Chao et al, 2015; De Franco et al, 2013; Eifes et al, 2013; Gong et al, 2013; Stanescu et al, 2015; Suzuki et al, 2014; Yorifuji et al, 2012; Yu et al, 2014). However, as with other cases of haploinsufficient disease genes, inactivation of one Gata6 allele does not cause apparent defects in mice (Morrisey et al, 1998).…”