SLC30A8 mutations in type 2 diabetes

GA Rutter, F Chimienti - Diabetologia, 2015 - Springer
GA Rutter, F Chimienti
Diabetologia, 2015Springer
SLC30A8 encodes the secretory granule-resident and largely endocrine pancreas-restricted
zinc transporter ZnT8. Interest in this gene product was sparked amongst diabetologists in
2007 when the first genome-wide association study for type 2 diabetes identified
polymorphisms in SLC30A8 as affecting disease risk. Thus, the common polymorphism
rs13266634 was associated with lowered beta cell function and a 14% increase in diabetes
abundance per risk (C) allele. This non-synonymous variant encodes a tryptophan-to …
Abstract
SLC30A8 encodes the secretory granule-resident and largely endocrine pancreas-restricted zinc transporter ZnT8. Interest in this gene product was sparked amongst diabetologists in 2007 when the first genome-wide association study for type 2 diabetes identified polymorphisms in SLC30A8 as affecting disease risk. Thus, the common polymorphism rs13266634 was associated with lowered beta cell function and a 14% increase in diabetes abundance per risk (C) allele. This non-synonymous variant encodes a tryptophan-to-arginine switch at position 325 in the protein’s intracellular carboxy-terminal domain, resulting in reduced zinc transport activity and, consequently, decreased intragranular zinc levels. Whereas insulin secretion from isolated islets is most often increased in mice inactivated for Slc30a8, null animals usually show impaired glucose tolerance and lowered circulating insulin. Since Slc30a8 null animals display little, if any, zinc secretion from islets, the lower plasma insulin levels could be explained by increased hepatic clearance as a result of lowered local zinc levels, or less efficient insulin action on target tissues. Despite the emerging consensus on the role of ZnT8 in glucose homeostasis, a recent genetic study in humans has unexpectedly identified loss-of-function SLC30A8 mutants that are associated with protection from diabetes. Here, we attempt to reconcile these apparently contradictory findings, implicating (1) differing degrees of inhibition of ZnT8 activity in carriers of common variants vs rare loss-of-function forms, (2) effects dependent on age or hypoxic beta cell stress. We propose that these variables conspire to affect both the size and the direction of the effect of SLC30A8 risk alleles in man.
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