Familial Hyperproinsulinemia Associated With NIDDM: A case study

Author:

Oohashi Hiroshi1,Ohgawara Hisako1,Nanjo Kishio1,Tasaka Yoshimasa1,Cao Qiu-Ping1,Chan Shu Jin1,Rubenstein Arthur H1,Steiner Donald F1,Omori Yasue1

Affiliation:

1. Diabetes Center, Tokyo Women's Medical College Tokyo; the First Department of Medicine, Wakayama University of Medical Science Wakayama, Japan; Department of Medicine, University of Chicago Chicago; Howard Hughes Medical Institute and Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, University of Chicago Chicago, Illinois; and Worcester Foundation for Experimental Biology Shrewsbury, Massachusetts

Abstract

OBJECTIVE To report studies on an elderly patient with moderate NIDDM associated with marked fasting hyperinsulinemia. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS The propositus and several family members were studied by a combination of clinical, biochemical, and molecular genetic approaches to define the underlying genetic defect. RESULTS Fasting levels of contrainsulin hormones were normal, and resistance to exogenous insulin was absent. Gel filtration and reverse-phase high-performance liquid chromatography revealed elevated amounts of a structurally abnormal proinsulin intermediate (AC proinsulin). A study of the family of the propositus showed rhe same abnormality in 4 of 5 members in 3 successive generations. Genetic analysis revealed a point mutation affecting residue 65 of human proinsulin (Arg→His) in one allele of the insulin gene in the propositus, a defect similar to that described previously in 3 other apparently unrelated lineages. CONCLUSIONS This family exhibits a clear-cut relationship between increasing age and metabolic decompensation in all the hyperproinsulinemic members, suggesting that (inherited) metabolic stress and age both contribute to development of diabetes mellitus.

Publisher

American Diabetes Association

Subject

Advanced and Specialized Nursing,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism,Internal Medicine

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3. Hyperproinsulinemia in obesity and in type 2 diabetes and its relation to cardiovascular disease;Expert Review of Endocrinology & Metabolism;2017-05-29

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