Absence of BiP Co-chaperone DNAJC3 Causes Diabetes Mellitus and Multisystemic Neurodegeneration

2014 | journal article. A publication with affiliation to the University of Göttingen.

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​Absence of BiP Co-chaperone DNAJC3 Causes Diabetes Mellitus and Multisystemic Neurodegeneration​
Synofzik, M.; Haack, T. B.; Kopajtich, R.; Gorza, M.; Rapaport, D. ; Greiner, M. & Schoenfeld, C. et al.​ (2014) 
The American Journal of Human Genetics95(6) pp. 689​-697​.​ DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajhg.2014.10.013 

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Authors
Synofzik, Matthis; Haack, Tobias B.; Kopajtich, Robert; Gorza, Matteo; Rapaport, Doron ; Greiner, Markus; Schoenfeld, Caroline; Freiberg, Clemens; Schorr, Stefan; Holl, Reinhard W.; Gonzalez, Michael A.; Fritsche, Andreas; Fallier-Becker, Petra; Zimmermann, Richard; Strom, Tim-Mathias; Meitinger, Thomas; Zuechner, Stephan; Schuele, Rebecca; Schoels, Ludger; Prokisch, Holger
Abstract
Diabetes mellitus and neurodegeneration are common diseases for which shared genetic factors are still only partly known. Here, we show that loss of the BiP (immunoglobulin heavy-chain binding protein) co-chaperone DNAJC3 leads to diabetes mellitus and widespread neurodegeneration. We investigated three siblings with juvenile-onset diabetes and central and peripheral neurodegeneration, including ataxia, upper-motor-neuron damage, peripheral neuropathy, hearing loss, and cerebral atrophy. Exome sequencing identified a homozygous stop mutation in DNAIC3. Screening of a diabetes database with 226,194 individuals yielded eight phenotypically similar individuals and one family carrying a homozygous DNAJC3 deletion. DNAJC3 was absent in fibroblasts from all affected subjects in both families. To delineate the phenotypic and mutational spectrum and the genetic variability of DNAJC3, we analyzed 8,603 exomes, including 506 from families affected by diabetes, ataxia, upper-motor-neuron damage, peripheral neuropathy, or hearing loss. This analysis revealed only one further loss-of-function allele in DNAIC3 and no further associations in subjects with only a subset of the features of the main phenotype. Our findings. demonstrate that loss-of-function DNAJC3 mutations lead to a monogenic, recessive form of diabetes mellitus in humans. Moreover, they present a common denominator for diabetes and widespread neurodegeneration. This complements findings from mice in which knockout of Dnajc3 leads to diabetes and modifies disease in a neurodegenerative model of Marinesco-Sjogren syndrome.
Issue Date
2014
Status
published
Publisher
Cell Press
Journal
The American Journal of Human Genetics 
ISSN
1537-6605; 0002-9297

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