Walker Lab

Wayne State University Medical School



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Emily Walker

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Center for Molecular Medicine and Genetics

Wayne State University

Scott Hall, Rm. 3218
540 E. Canfield Ave
Detroit, MI 48201




Walker Lab

Wayne State University Medical School



Center for Molecular Medicine and Genetics

Wayne State University

Scott Hall, Rm. 3218
540 E. Canfield Ave
Detroit, MI 48201



MAFA missense mutation causes familial insulinomatosis and diabetes mellitus


Journal article


D. Iacovazzo, S. Flanagan, E. Walker, Rosana Quezado, F. A. de Sousa Barros, R. Caswell, Matthew B. Johnson, M. Wakeling, M. Brändle, M. Guo, M. Dang, P. Gabrovska, B. Niederle, E. Christ, S. Jenni, B. Sipos, Maike Nieser, A. Frilling, K. Dhatariya, P. Chanson, W. D. de Herder, B. Konukiewitz, G. Klöppel, R. Stein, M. Korbonits, S. Ellard
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 2018

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APA   Click to copy
Iacovazzo, D., Flanagan, S., Walker, E., Quezado, R., de Sousa Barros, F. A., Caswell, R., … Ellard, S. (2018). MAFA missense mutation causes familial insulinomatosis and diabetes mellitus. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Iacovazzo, D., S. Flanagan, E. Walker, Rosana Quezado, F. A. de Sousa Barros, R. Caswell, Matthew B. Johnson, et al. “MAFA Missense Mutation Causes Familial Insulinomatosis and Diabetes Mellitus.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2018).


MLA   Click to copy
Iacovazzo, D., et al. “MAFA Missense Mutation Causes Familial Insulinomatosis and Diabetes Mellitus.” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 2018.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{d2018a,
  title = {MAFA missense mutation causes familial insulinomatosis and diabetes mellitus},
  year = {2018},
  journal = {Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America},
  author = {Iacovazzo, D. and Flanagan, S. and Walker, E. and Quezado, Rosana and de Sousa Barros, F. A. and Caswell, R. and Johnson, Matthew B. and Wakeling, M. and Brändle, M. and Guo, M. and Dang, M. and Gabrovska, P. and Niederle, B. and Christ, E. and Jenni, S. and Sipos, B. and Nieser, Maike and Frilling, A. and Dhatariya, K. and Chanson, P. and de Herder, W. D. and Konukiewitz, B. and Klöppel, G. and Stein, R. and Korbonits, M. and Ellard, S.}
}

Abstract

Significance We report a disease-causing mutation in the β-cell–enriched MAFA transcription factor. Strikingly, the missense p.Ser64Phe MAFA mutation was associated with either of two distinct phenotypes, multiple insulin-producing neuroendocrine tumors of the pancreas—a condition known as insulinomatosis—or diabetes mellitus, recapitulating the physiological properties of MAFA both as an oncogene and as a key islet β-cell transcription factor. The implication of MAFA in these human phenotypes will provide insights into how this transcription factor regulates human β-cell activity as well as into the mechanisms of Maf-induced tumorigenesis. The β-cell–enriched MAFA transcription factor plays a central role in regulating glucose-stimulated insulin secretion while also demonstrating oncogenic transformation potential in vitro. No disease-causing MAFA variants have been previously described. We investigated a large pedigree with autosomal dominant inheritance of diabetes mellitus or insulinomatosis, an adult-onset condition of recurrent hyperinsulinemic hypoglycemia caused by multiple insulin-secreting neuroendocrine tumors of the pancreas. Using exome sequencing, we identified a missense MAFA mutation (p.Ser64Phe, c.191C>T) segregating with both phenotypes of insulinomatosis and diabetes. This mutation was also found in a second unrelated family with the same clinical phenotype, while no germline or somatic MAFA mutations were identified in nine patients with sporadic insulinomatosis. In the two families, insulinomatosis presented more frequently in females (eight females/two males) and diabetes more often in males (12 males/four females). Four patients from the index family, including two homozygotes, had a history of congenital cataract and/or glaucoma. The p.Ser64Phe mutation was found to impair phosphorylation within the transactivation domain of MAFA and profoundly increased MAFA protein stability under both high and low glucose concentrations in β-cell lines. In addition, the transactivation potential of p.Ser64Phe MAFA in β-cell lines was enhanced compared with wild-type MAFA. In summary, the p.Ser64Phe missense MAFA mutation leads to familial insulinomatosis or diabetes by impacting MAFA protein stability and transactivation ability. The human phenotypes associated with the p.Ser64Phe MAFA missense mutation reflect both the oncogenic capacity of MAFA and its key role in islet β-cell activity.


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