{"title":"1例由SLC5A2基因突变引起的家族性肾性尿糖症的中国年轻2型糖尿病女孩","authors":"Yuqing Qu, Limei Hao, Xianling Wang","doi":"10.1111/1753-0407.13410","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p>The pathogenesis of youth-onset type 2 diabetes is different from that of maturity-onset diabetes of the young (MODY) and from type 1 diabetes, but there are many overlapped clinical manifestations among these three types of diabetes. Delays in differential diagnosis and incorrect treatment will definitely cause worse prognosis. If hyperglycemia cannot be well controlled in diabetic patients, hyperglycosuria and even ketonuria will be present.</p><p>Proximal tubules in the kidneys can reabsorb 180 g glucose every day in physiological conditions. If plasma glucose concentrations are in the normal range (< 200 mg/dL), all the filtered glucose will be reabsorbed in the proximal renal tubules. As a result, no urinary glucose is excreted.<span><sup>1</sup></span></p><p>Familial renal glycosuria (FRG) is a rare genetic disorder of proximal tubular glucose transport, characterized by excessive urinary glucose excretion even if blood glucose level is in normal range. It has been confirmed that mutations in the solute carrier family 5 members 2 (<i>SLC5A2</i>) gene, which encodes sodium-glucose cotransporter 2 (SGLT2), are responsible for this disease.<span><sup>2</sup></span> The <i>SLC5A2</i> gene is a 7.7 kb gene containing 14 exons and encoding protein SGLT2, with 672 amino acids and an inferred secondary structure consisting of 14 transmembrane-spanning domains and expressed in the S1 and S2 segments of the proximal convoluted tubule, which account for 90% of renal glucose reabsorption.<span><sup>3</sup></span> FRG may be transmitted in an autosomal dominant pattern, although current studies demonstrated that its inheritance may be codominant with incomplete penetrance. FRG is a benign condition, which does not need any treatment, and the prognosis of patients with this disorder is usually favorable.</p><p>There is no report about youth-onset type 2 diabetes associated with FRG. Herein we described the clinical characteristics of a Chinese girl with youth-onset type 2 diabetes coexisting with FRG, in whom a novel mutation (NM_003041.4:c.1129 + 2 T > C) of the <i>SLC5A2</i> gene might explain FRG occurrence.</p><p>The patient presented with polydipsia, polyuria, and weight loss at age 14 years. Endocrinological evaluations showed fasting and postprandial serum insulin and C-peptide in the normal range, with negative islet autoantibodies, thus excluding type 1 diabetes diagnosis and presuming the MODY one.</p><p>MODY is a special type of diabetes mellitus, representing a small but very important fraction of diabetic patients (1%–5%),<span><sup>4, 5</sup></span> and 1%–6% of cases in pediatric age.<span><sup>6</sup></span> In this patient, no mutations in 14 genes associated with MODY have been detected, and its diagnosis was also excluded.</p><p>The clinical presentation of youth-onset type 2 diabetes resembles that of MODY, but these patients are usually overweight or obese. The diagnosis of youth-onset type 2 diabetes was confirmed in the present patient, and other types of diabetes mellitus were excluded.</p><p>The proband underwent insulin and metformin treatment, performed also at high doses, not allowing however to limit glycosuria and ketonuria even when blood glucose levels almost reached the normal range. Then, a possible concurrent FRG diagnosis was supposed.</p><p>FRG is a rare renal tubular disorder in which patients present isolated persistent glycosuria without abnormal glucose metabolism and other proximal tubular disorder. Previous studies confirmed that <i>SLC5A2</i> gene mutations are responsible for FRG. Most of patients with heterozygous mutations have slight glycosuria (<10 g/d) or no glycosuria, whereas other individuals with homozygous or compound heterozygous mutations usually have serious glycosuria (>10 g/d).<span><sup>7</sup></span> Qian Ren research showed that the urine glucose excretion was significantly higher in patients with homozygous mutations than those with compound heterozygous ones.<span><sup>8</sup></span> To date, 115 variants in the <i>SLC5A2</i> gene were identified. The most frequent ones include missense, frameshift, and splicing mutations.<span><sup>9</sup></span> They appear to affect transport activity through decreasing intrinsic transporter activity, reducing protein insertion into cell membrane, inhibiting protein synthesis, and accelerating protein degradation. FRG is a benign condition, which does not need any specific treatment, because it causes no apparent symptoms or severe outcomes, such as hypoglycemia, polyuria, or dehydration.</p><p>In this family, a heterozygous variation was detected in the <i>SLC5A2</i> gene (NM_003041.4:c.1129 + 2 T > C) in the proband and her father. The novel mutation occurred at the exon-intron boundaries. Theoretically, the mutation can affect the normal cleavage of mRNA. To date, this variation has not been reported in literature or in large-scale population frequency databases. According to the clinical manifestations presented in the proband, we considered the <i>SLC5A2</i> mutation detected as likely pathogenic, based on the variation classification guidelines of ACMG. SGLT2 plays a key role in sugar binding and translocation in proximal convoluted tubule. Its mutation can lead to SGLT2 impaired function, decreasing the reabsorption of glucose from the filtered urine and reducing blood glucose together with sodium depletion, and being thus responsible for glycosuria and osmotic diuresis. As a result, this youth-onset type 2 diabetic patient also had continuous glycosuria. Theoretically, we hypothesized the hyperglycemia is more easier to be controlled in type 2 diabetes patients coexisting with FRG. However, this phenomenon was not observed in this patient, because her blood glucose levels were not well controlled with a higher dose of insulin combined with metformin. It has been hypothesized that, because lipolysis within the adipose tissues and the free fatty production acids will increase, subsequently an uninhibited transport of fatty acids into hepatic mitochondria and ketone bodies production through ß-oxidation may occur.<span><sup>10</sup></span> Actually, SGLT2 inhibition can directly act on pancreatic α-cells to increase secretion of glucagon, leading to the propensity of ketone production. <i>SLC5A2</i> gene mutations and then SGLT2 dysfunctions might be responsible for glucagon hypersecretion, thus causing continuous glycosuria and ketonuria even when blood glucose is near the normal range.</p><p>The proband and her father had different phenotypes even though they had the same mutation. Such variants are referred to as incomplete penetrance, leading to a wide range of diverse phenotypes, from asymptomatic cases to severe disease among related individuals. Both incomplete penetrance and variable expressivity are thought to be caused by many factors, including common variants, variants in regulatory regions, epigenetics, environmental factors, and lifestyle.<span><sup>11, 12</sup></span> The inheritance of FRG is usually confirmed as codominant with incomplete penetrance, because not all patients with similar or identical mutations have the same degree of excessive glucose excretion.<span><sup>13</sup></span> Our finding was consistent with the literature reports.</p><p>Additionally, the patient suffered from recurrent UTI. Diabetic women have an increased incidence of recurrent UTI compared with nondiabetic patients, as excessive glucose in the urine can enhance bacterial growth. It may be worse in our diabetic female patient also affected with FRG, because glycosuria and consequent predisposition to growth of commensal microorganisms were more serious.</p><p>The etiologies of diabetes mellitus are different, and diabetic patients usually present with many characteristics. Thus, the differential diagnosis is usually difficult, especially when diabetic patients concurrently suffer from other rare diseases, which may interfere with glucose homeostasis as observed in the present patient. Clinicians should enhance their ability to distinguish such complex phenotypes and perform early and careful clinical evaluation in these patients.<span><sup>14, 15</sup></span> Genetic investigations, including next generation sequencing, are extremely useful in identifying specific gene mutations in the patients, or in their family members, as well as to ensure the most appropriate therapy and follow-up.<span><sup>16-19</sup></span></p><p>Yuqing Qu and Xianling Wang conceived of and designed the work. Limei Hao acquired the data. Yuqing Qu analyzed the data and drafted the manuscript. Xianling Wang critically revised the manuscript for important intellectual content. All authors were responsible for the interpretation of the data and revised and gave final approval of the manuscript. Xianling Wang is the guarantor of the work and, as such, had full access to all the data and takes responsibility for the integrity of the data and the accuracy of the data analysis.</p><p>This study did not receive any specific grant from funding agencies in the public, commercial, or not-for-profit sectors.</p>","PeriodicalId":189,"journal":{"name":"Journal of Diabetes","volume":"15 7","pages":"622-626"},"PeriodicalIF":3.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-05-16","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/1753-0407.13410","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"A young-onset type 2 diabetic Chinese girl with familial renal glycosuria caused by a novel mutation in SLC5A2: A case report\",\"authors\":\"Yuqing Qu, Limei Hao, Xianling Wang\",\"doi\":\"10.1111/1753-0407.13410\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<p>The pathogenesis of youth-onset type 2 diabetes is different from that of maturity-onset diabetes of the young (MODY) and from type 1 diabetes, but there are many overlapped clinical manifestations among these three types of diabetes. Delays in differential diagnosis and incorrect treatment will definitely cause worse prognosis. If hyperglycemia cannot be well controlled in diabetic patients, hyperglycosuria and even ketonuria will be present.</p><p>Proximal tubules in the kidneys can reabsorb 180 g glucose every day in physiological conditions. If plasma glucose concentrations are in the normal range (< 200 mg/dL), all the filtered glucose will be reabsorbed in the proximal renal tubules. As a result, no urinary glucose is excreted.<span><sup>1</sup></span></p><p>Familial renal glycosuria (FRG) is a rare genetic disorder of proximal tubular glucose transport, characterized by excessive urinary glucose excretion even if blood glucose level is in normal range. It has been confirmed that mutations in the solute carrier family 5 members 2 (<i>SLC5A2</i>) gene, which encodes sodium-glucose cotransporter 2 (SGLT2), are responsible for this disease.<span><sup>2</sup></span> The <i>SLC5A2</i> gene is a 7.7 kb gene containing 14 exons and encoding protein SGLT2, with 672 amino acids and an inferred secondary structure consisting of 14 transmembrane-spanning domains and expressed in the S1 and S2 segments of the proximal convoluted tubule, which account for 90% of renal glucose reabsorption.<span><sup>3</sup></span> FRG may be transmitted in an autosomal dominant pattern, although current studies demonstrated that its inheritance may be codominant with incomplete penetrance. FRG is a benign condition, which does not need any treatment, and the prognosis of patients with this disorder is usually favorable.</p><p>There is no report about youth-onset type 2 diabetes associated with FRG. Herein we described the clinical characteristics of a Chinese girl with youth-onset type 2 diabetes coexisting with FRG, in whom a novel mutation (NM_003041.4:c.1129 + 2 T > C) of the <i>SLC5A2</i> gene might explain FRG occurrence.</p><p>The patient presented with polydipsia, polyuria, and weight loss at age 14 years. Endocrinological evaluations showed fasting and postprandial serum insulin and C-peptide in the normal range, with negative islet autoantibodies, thus excluding type 1 diabetes diagnosis and presuming the MODY one.</p><p>MODY is a special type of diabetes mellitus, representing a small but very important fraction of diabetic patients (1%–5%),<span><sup>4, 5</sup></span> and 1%–6% of cases in pediatric age.<span><sup>6</sup></span> In this patient, no mutations in 14 genes associated with MODY have been detected, and its diagnosis was also excluded.</p><p>The clinical presentation of youth-onset type 2 diabetes resembles that of MODY, but these patients are usually overweight or obese. The diagnosis of youth-onset type 2 diabetes was confirmed in the present patient, and other types of diabetes mellitus were excluded.</p><p>The proband underwent insulin and metformin treatment, performed also at high doses, not allowing however to limit glycosuria and ketonuria even when blood glucose levels almost reached the normal range. Then, a possible concurrent FRG diagnosis was supposed.</p><p>FRG is a rare renal tubular disorder in which patients present isolated persistent glycosuria without abnormal glucose metabolism and other proximal tubular disorder. Previous studies confirmed that <i>SLC5A2</i> gene mutations are responsible for FRG. Most of patients with heterozygous mutations have slight glycosuria (<10 g/d) or no glycosuria, whereas other individuals with homozygous or compound heterozygous mutations usually have serious glycosuria (>10 g/d).<span><sup>7</sup></span> Qian Ren research showed that the urine glucose excretion was significantly higher in patients with homozygous mutations than those with compound heterozygous ones.<span><sup>8</sup></span> To date, 115 variants in the <i>SLC5A2</i> gene were identified. The most frequent ones include missense, frameshift, and splicing mutations.<span><sup>9</sup></span> They appear to affect transport activity through decreasing intrinsic transporter activity, reducing protein insertion into cell membrane, inhibiting protein synthesis, and accelerating protein degradation. FRG is a benign condition, which does not need any specific treatment, because it causes no apparent symptoms or severe outcomes, such as hypoglycemia, polyuria, or dehydration.</p><p>In this family, a heterozygous variation was detected in the <i>SLC5A2</i> gene (NM_003041.4:c.1129 + 2 T > C) in the proband and her father. The novel mutation occurred at the exon-intron boundaries. Theoretically, the mutation can affect the normal cleavage of mRNA. To date, this variation has not been reported in literature or in large-scale population frequency databases. According to the clinical manifestations presented in the proband, we considered the <i>SLC5A2</i> mutation detected as likely pathogenic, based on the variation classification guidelines of ACMG. SGLT2 plays a key role in sugar binding and translocation in proximal convoluted tubule. Its mutation can lead to SGLT2 impaired function, decreasing the reabsorption of glucose from the filtered urine and reducing blood glucose together with sodium depletion, and being thus responsible for glycosuria and osmotic diuresis. As a result, this youth-onset type 2 diabetic patient also had continuous glycosuria. Theoretically, we hypothesized the hyperglycemia is more easier to be controlled in type 2 diabetes patients coexisting with FRG. However, this phenomenon was not observed in this patient, because her blood glucose levels were not well controlled with a higher dose of insulin combined with metformin. It has been hypothesized that, because lipolysis within the adipose tissues and the free fatty production acids will increase, subsequently an uninhibited transport of fatty acids into hepatic mitochondria and ketone bodies production through ß-oxidation may occur.<span><sup>10</sup></span> Actually, SGLT2 inhibition can directly act on pancreatic α-cells to increase secretion of glucagon, leading to the propensity of ketone production. <i>SLC5A2</i> gene mutations and then SGLT2 dysfunctions might be responsible for glucagon hypersecretion, thus causing continuous glycosuria and ketonuria even when blood glucose is near the normal range.</p><p>The proband and her father had different phenotypes even though they had the same mutation. Such variants are referred to as incomplete penetrance, leading to a wide range of diverse phenotypes, from asymptomatic cases to severe disease among related individuals. Both incomplete penetrance and variable expressivity are thought to be caused by many factors, including common variants, variants in regulatory regions, epigenetics, environmental factors, and lifestyle.<span><sup>11, 12</sup></span> The inheritance of FRG is usually confirmed as codominant with incomplete penetrance, because not all patients with similar or identical mutations have the same degree of excessive glucose excretion.<span><sup>13</sup></span> Our finding was consistent with the literature reports.</p><p>Additionally, the patient suffered from recurrent UTI. Diabetic women have an increased incidence of recurrent UTI compared with nondiabetic patients, as excessive glucose in the urine can enhance bacterial growth. It may be worse in our diabetic female patient also affected with FRG, because glycosuria and consequent predisposition to growth of commensal microorganisms were more serious.</p><p>The etiologies of diabetes mellitus are different, and diabetic patients usually present with many characteristics. Thus, the differential diagnosis is usually difficult, especially when diabetic patients concurrently suffer from other rare diseases, which may interfere with glucose homeostasis as observed in the present patient. Clinicians should enhance their ability to distinguish such complex phenotypes and perform early and careful clinical evaluation in these patients.<span><sup>14, 15</sup></span> Genetic investigations, including next generation sequencing, are extremely useful in identifying specific gene mutations in the patients, or in their family members, as well as to ensure the most appropriate therapy and follow-up.<span><sup>16-19</sup></span></p><p>Yuqing Qu and Xianling Wang conceived of and designed the work. Limei Hao acquired the data. Yuqing Qu analyzed the data and drafted the manuscript. Xianling Wang critically revised the manuscript for important intellectual content. All authors were responsible for the interpretation of the data and revised and gave final approval of the manuscript. Xianling Wang is the guarantor of the work and, as such, had full access to all the data and takes responsibility for the integrity of the data and the accuracy of the data analysis.</p><p>This study did not receive any specific grant from funding agencies in the public, commercial, or not-for-profit sectors.</p>\",\"PeriodicalId\":189,\"journal\":{\"name\":\"Journal of Diabetes\",\"volume\":\"15 7\",\"pages\":\"622-626\"},\"PeriodicalIF\":3.0000,\"publicationDate\":\"2023-05-16\",\"publicationTypes\":\"Journal Article\",\"fieldsOfStudy\":null,\"isOpenAccess\":false,\"openAccessPdf\":\"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1111/1753-0407.13410\",\"citationCount\":\"0\",\"resultStr\":null,\"platform\":\"Semanticscholar\",\"paperid\":null,\"PeriodicalName\":\"Journal of Diabetes\",\"FirstCategoryId\":\"3\",\"ListUrlMain\":\"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1753-0407.13410\",\"RegionNum\":2,\"RegionCategory\":\"医学\",\"ArticlePicture\":[],\"TitleCN\":null,\"AbstractTextCN\":null,\"PMCID\":null,\"EPubDate\":\"\",\"PubModel\":\"\",\"JCR\":\"Q2\",\"JCRName\":\"ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM\",\"Score\":null,\"Total\":0}","platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Journal of Diabetes","FirstCategoryId":"3","ListUrlMain":"https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/1753-0407.13410","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"医学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"ENDOCRINOLOGY & METABOLISM","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
摘要
青年型2型糖尿病的发病机制不同于青年型成熟型糖尿病(MODY),也不同于1型糖尿病,但这三种糖尿病的临床表现有很多重叠。鉴别诊断的延误和不正确的治疗肯定会导致较差的预后。糖尿病患者如果不能很好地控制高血糖,就会出现高糖尿甚至酮症尿。生理条件下肾脏近端小管每天可重吸收180克葡萄糖。如果血浆葡萄糖浓度在正常范围内(200 mg/dL),所有过滤的葡萄糖将在近端肾小管中重新吸收。因此,没有尿葡萄糖被排出体外。1家族性肾糖尿症(FRG)是一种罕见的近端肾小管糖运输遗传性疾病,其特征是即使血糖水平在正常范围内,尿糖排泄也过多。已经证实,编码钠-葡萄糖共转运蛋白2 (SGLT2)的溶质载体家族5成员2 (SLC5A2)基因的突变是导致这种疾病的原因SLC5A2基因是一个7.7 kb的基因,包含14个外显子,编码蛋白SGLT2,有672个氨基酸,二级结构由14个跨膜结构域组成,表达于近曲小管的S1和S2段,占肾葡萄糖重吸收的90%FRG可能以常染色体显性模式传播,尽管目前的研究表明其遗传可能是不完全外显的共显性遗传。FRG是一种良性疾病,不需要任何治疗,患者预后通常良好。没有关于青年发病2型糖尿病与FRG相关的报道。本文中,我们描述了一名年轻发病的2型糖尿病并发FRG的中国女孩的临床特征,其中SLC5A2基因的一种新的突变(NM_003041.4: C .1129 + 2 T > C)可能解释了FRG的发生。患者14岁时出现多饮、多尿和体重下降。内分泌学检查空腹及餐后血清胰岛素、c肽正常,胰岛自身抗体阴性,排除1型糖尿病,推测为MODY。MODY是一种特殊类型的糖尿病,在糖尿病患者中占很小但很重要的比例(1%-5%),在儿科中占4,5和1%-6%在该患者中,未检测到与MODY相关的14个基因突变,也排除了其诊断。年轻发病的2型糖尿病的临床表现与MODY相似,但这些患者通常超重或肥胖。本例确诊为青年型2型糖尿病,排除其他类型糖尿病。先证者接受胰岛素和二甲双胍治疗,同样是高剂量,但即使血糖水平接近正常范围,也不能限制糖尿和酮尿。然后,假设可能并发FRG诊断。FRG是一种罕见的肾小管疾病,患者表现为孤立的持续性糖尿,无糖代谢异常和其他近端肾小管疾病。既往研究证实SLC5A2基因突变与FRG有关。大多数杂合突变患者有轻微的糖尿症(10 g/d)或无糖尿症,而其他纯合或复合杂合突变患者通常有严重的糖尿症(10 g/d)钱仁的研究表明,纯合突变患者的尿糖排泄量明显高于复合杂合突变患者到目前为止,已经鉴定出115种SLC5A2基因变异。最常见的突变包括误义、移码和剪接突变它们似乎通过降低内在转运蛋白活性、减少蛋白质插入细胞膜、抑制蛋白质合成和加速蛋白质降解来影响转运活性。FRG是一种良性疾病,不需要任何特殊治疗,因为它不会引起明显的症状或严重的后果,如低血糖、多尿或脱水。在该家族中,先证者及其父亲的SLC5A2基因(NM_003041.4: C .1129 + 2 T > C)存在杂合变异。新的突变发生在外显子-内含子边界。理论上,这种突变可以影响mRNA的正常切割。迄今为止,这种变异尚未在文献或大规模人口频率数据库中报道。根据先证者的临床表现,根据ACMG变异分类指南,我们认为检测到的SLC5A2突变可能具有致病性。SGLT2在近曲小管的糖结合和易位中起关键作用。 其突变可导致SGLT2功能受损,减少过滤后尿液中葡萄糖的重吸收,降低血糖并伴有钠的消耗,从而导致糖尿和渗透性利尿。因此,这名年轻发病的2型糖尿病患者也有持续的糖尿。理论上,我们假设伴有FRG的2型糖尿病患者高血糖更容易控制。然而,在该患者中没有观察到这种现象,因为较高剂量的胰岛素联合二甲双胍未能很好地控制血糖水平。据推测,由于脂肪组织内的脂肪分解和游离脂肪酸的产生会增加,随后可能会发生脂肪酸通过ß-氧化不受抑制地转运到肝线粒体和酮体的产生实际上,抑制SGLT2可直接作用于胰腺α-细胞,增加胰高血糖素的分泌,导致产生酮的倾向。SLC5A2基因突变导致SGLT2功能异常可能是胰高血糖素高分泌的原因,即使血糖接近正常范围,也会引起持续的糖尿和酮症尿。先证者和她的父亲有不同的表型,即使他们有相同的突变。这种变异被称为不完全外显性,导致相关个体之间从无症状病例到严重疾病的各种各样的表型。不完全外显率和可变表达率被认为是由许多因素引起的,包括常见变异、调控区域变异、表观遗传学、环境因素和生活方式。11,12 FRG的遗传通常被证实为共显性,外显率不完全,因为并非所有具有相似或相同突变的患者都有相同程度的过量葡萄糖排泄我们的发现与文献报道一致。此外,患者患有复发性尿路感染。与非糖尿病患者相比,糖尿病女性复发性尿路感染的发生率更高,因为尿中过量的葡萄糖会促进细菌生长。本例合并FRG的女性糖尿病患者可能更严重,因为糖尿和随之而来的共生微生物生长易感性更严重。糖尿病的病因不同,糖尿病患者通常表现出许多特征。因此,鉴别诊断通常是困难的,特别是当糖尿病患者同时患有其他罕见疾病时,正如本例患者所观察到的,这些疾病可能会干扰葡萄糖稳态。临床医生应提高区分这些复杂表型的能力,并对这些患者进行早期和仔细的临床评估。14,15基因调查,包括下一代测序,在确定患者或其家庭成员的特定基因突变以及确保最适当的治疗和随访方面非常有用。16-19曲玉清和王贤玲构思并设计了该作品。郝丽梅获得了数据。曲玉清分析了资料并起草了手稿。王宪龄对重要的知识内容进行了批判性的修改。所有作者负责对数据的解释,并对稿件进行修改和最终批复。Xianling Wang是这项工作的担保人,因此,他可以完全访问所有数据,并对数据的完整性和数据分析的准确性负责。这项研究没有从公共、商业或非营利部门的资助机构获得任何具体的资助。
A young-onset type 2 diabetic Chinese girl with familial renal glycosuria caused by a novel mutation in SLC5A2: A case report
The pathogenesis of youth-onset type 2 diabetes is different from that of maturity-onset diabetes of the young (MODY) and from type 1 diabetes, but there are many overlapped clinical manifestations among these three types of diabetes. Delays in differential diagnosis and incorrect treatment will definitely cause worse prognosis. If hyperglycemia cannot be well controlled in diabetic patients, hyperglycosuria and even ketonuria will be present.
Proximal tubules in the kidneys can reabsorb 180 g glucose every day in physiological conditions. If plasma glucose concentrations are in the normal range (< 200 mg/dL), all the filtered glucose will be reabsorbed in the proximal renal tubules. As a result, no urinary glucose is excreted.1
Familial renal glycosuria (FRG) is a rare genetic disorder of proximal tubular glucose transport, characterized by excessive urinary glucose excretion even if blood glucose level is in normal range. It has been confirmed that mutations in the solute carrier family 5 members 2 (SLC5A2) gene, which encodes sodium-glucose cotransporter 2 (SGLT2), are responsible for this disease.2 The SLC5A2 gene is a 7.7 kb gene containing 14 exons and encoding protein SGLT2, with 672 amino acids and an inferred secondary structure consisting of 14 transmembrane-spanning domains and expressed in the S1 and S2 segments of the proximal convoluted tubule, which account for 90% of renal glucose reabsorption.3 FRG may be transmitted in an autosomal dominant pattern, although current studies demonstrated that its inheritance may be codominant with incomplete penetrance. FRG is a benign condition, which does not need any treatment, and the prognosis of patients with this disorder is usually favorable.
There is no report about youth-onset type 2 diabetes associated with FRG. Herein we described the clinical characteristics of a Chinese girl with youth-onset type 2 diabetes coexisting with FRG, in whom a novel mutation (NM_003041.4:c.1129 + 2 T > C) of the SLC5A2 gene might explain FRG occurrence.
The patient presented with polydipsia, polyuria, and weight loss at age 14 years. Endocrinological evaluations showed fasting and postprandial serum insulin and C-peptide in the normal range, with negative islet autoantibodies, thus excluding type 1 diabetes diagnosis and presuming the MODY one.
MODY is a special type of diabetes mellitus, representing a small but very important fraction of diabetic patients (1%–5%),4, 5 and 1%–6% of cases in pediatric age.6 In this patient, no mutations in 14 genes associated with MODY have been detected, and its diagnosis was also excluded.
The clinical presentation of youth-onset type 2 diabetes resembles that of MODY, but these patients are usually overweight or obese. The diagnosis of youth-onset type 2 diabetes was confirmed in the present patient, and other types of diabetes mellitus were excluded.
The proband underwent insulin and metformin treatment, performed also at high doses, not allowing however to limit glycosuria and ketonuria even when blood glucose levels almost reached the normal range. Then, a possible concurrent FRG diagnosis was supposed.
FRG is a rare renal tubular disorder in which patients present isolated persistent glycosuria without abnormal glucose metabolism and other proximal tubular disorder. Previous studies confirmed that SLC5A2 gene mutations are responsible for FRG. Most of patients with heterozygous mutations have slight glycosuria (<10 g/d) or no glycosuria, whereas other individuals with homozygous or compound heterozygous mutations usually have serious glycosuria (>10 g/d).7 Qian Ren research showed that the urine glucose excretion was significantly higher in patients with homozygous mutations than those with compound heterozygous ones.8 To date, 115 variants in the SLC5A2 gene were identified. The most frequent ones include missense, frameshift, and splicing mutations.9 They appear to affect transport activity through decreasing intrinsic transporter activity, reducing protein insertion into cell membrane, inhibiting protein synthesis, and accelerating protein degradation. FRG is a benign condition, which does not need any specific treatment, because it causes no apparent symptoms or severe outcomes, such as hypoglycemia, polyuria, or dehydration.
In this family, a heterozygous variation was detected in the SLC5A2 gene (NM_003041.4:c.1129 + 2 T > C) in the proband and her father. The novel mutation occurred at the exon-intron boundaries. Theoretically, the mutation can affect the normal cleavage of mRNA. To date, this variation has not been reported in literature or in large-scale population frequency databases. According to the clinical manifestations presented in the proband, we considered the SLC5A2 mutation detected as likely pathogenic, based on the variation classification guidelines of ACMG. SGLT2 plays a key role in sugar binding and translocation in proximal convoluted tubule. Its mutation can lead to SGLT2 impaired function, decreasing the reabsorption of glucose from the filtered urine and reducing blood glucose together with sodium depletion, and being thus responsible for glycosuria and osmotic diuresis. As a result, this youth-onset type 2 diabetic patient also had continuous glycosuria. Theoretically, we hypothesized the hyperglycemia is more easier to be controlled in type 2 diabetes patients coexisting with FRG. However, this phenomenon was not observed in this patient, because her blood glucose levels were not well controlled with a higher dose of insulin combined with metformin. It has been hypothesized that, because lipolysis within the adipose tissues and the free fatty production acids will increase, subsequently an uninhibited transport of fatty acids into hepatic mitochondria and ketone bodies production through ß-oxidation may occur.10 Actually, SGLT2 inhibition can directly act on pancreatic α-cells to increase secretion of glucagon, leading to the propensity of ketone production. SLC5A2 gene mutations and then SGLT2 dysfunctions might be responsible for glucagon hypersecretion, thus causing continuous glycosuria and ketonuria even when blood glucose is near the normal range.
The proband and her father had different phenotypes even though they had the same mutation. Such variants are referred to as incomplete penetrance, leading to a wide range of diverse phenotypes, from asymptomatic cases to severe disease among related individuals. Both incomplete penetrance and variable expressivity are thought to be caused by many factors, including common variants, variants in regulatory regions, epigenetics, environmental factors, and lifestyle.11, 12 The inheritance of FRG is usually confirmed as codominant with incomplete penetrance, because not all patients with similar or identical mutations have the same degree of excessive glucose excretion.13 Our finding was consistent with the literature reports.
Additionally, the patient suffered from recurrent UTI. Diabetic women have an increased incidence of recurrent UTI compared with nondiabetic patients, as excessive glucose in the urine can enhance bacterial growth. It may be worse in our diabetic female patient also affected with FRG, because glycosuria and consequent predisposition to growth of commensal microorganisms were more serious.
The etiologies of diabetes mellitus are different, and diabetic patients usually present with many characteristics. Thus, the differential diagnosis is usually difficult, especially when diabetic patients concurrently suffer from other rare diseases, which may interfere with glucose homeostasis as observed in the present patient. Clinicians should enhance their ability to distinguish such complex phenotypes and perform early and careful clinical evaluation in these patients.14, 15 Genetic investigations, including next generation sequencing, are extremely useful in identifying specific gene mutations in the patients, or in their family members, as well as to ensure the most appropriate therapy and follow-up.16-19
Yuqing Qu and Xianling Wang conceived of and designed the work. Limei Hao acquired the data. Yuqing Qu analyzed the data and drafted the manuscript. Xianling Wang critically revised the manuscript for important intellectual content. All authors were responsible for the interpretation of the data and revised and gave final approval of the manuscript. Xianling Wang is the guarantor of the work and, as such, had full access to all the data and takes responsibility for the integrity of the data and the accuracy of the data analysis.
This study did not receive any specific grant from funding agencies in the public, commercial, or not-for-profit sectors.
期刊介绍:
Journal of Diabetes (JDB) devotes itself to diabetes research, therapeutics, and education. It aims to involve researchers and practitioners in a dialogue between East and West via all aspects of epidemiology, etiology, pathogenesis, management, complications and prevention of diabetes, including the molecular, biochemical, and physiological aspects of diabetes. The Editorial team is international with a unique mix of Asian and Western participation.
The Editors welcome submissions in form of original research articles, images, novel case reports and correspondence, and will solicit reviews, point-counterpoint, commentaries, editorials, news highlights, and educational content.