An Activating Mutation of AKT2 and Human Hypoglycemia

K Hussain, B Challis, N Rocha, F Payne, M Minic… - Science, 2011 - science.org
K Hussain, B Challis, N Rocha, F Payne, M Minic, A Thompson, A Daly, C Scott, J Harris…
Science, 2011science.org
Pathological fasting hypoglycemia in humans is usually explained by excessive circulating
insulin or insulin-like molecules or by inborn errors of metabolism impairing liver glucose
production. We studied three unrelated children with unexplained, recurrent, and severe
fasting hypoglycemia and asymmetrical growth. All were found to carry the same de novo
mutation, p. Glu17Lys, in the serine/threonine kinase AKT2, in two cases as heterozygotes
and in one case in mosaic form. In heterologous cells, the mutant AKT2 was constitutively …
Pathological fasting hypoglycemia in humans is usually explained by excessive circulating insulin or insulin-like molecules or by inborn errors of metabolism impairing liver glucose production. We studied three unrelated children with unexplained, recurrent, and severe fasting hypoglycemia and asymmetrical growth. All were found to carry the same de novo mutation, p.Glu17Lys, in the serine/threonine kinase AKT2, in two cases as heterozygotes and in one case in mosaic form. In heterologous cells, the mutant AKT2 was constitutively recruited to the plasma membrane, leading to insulin-independent activation of downstream signaling. Thus, systemic metabolic disease can result from constitutive, cell-autonomous activation of signaling pathways normally controlled by insulin.
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