Molecular Pathogenesis
The molecular pathogenesis of 6q24-TNDM is not yet understood. The minimal disease-associated region has been refined [Docherty et al 2010] excluding all but PLAGL1 and HYMAI as candidate genes for 6q24-TNDM. Maternal alleles are methylated within the differentially methylated region (DMR; imprinting center) of PLAGL1 (ZAC) and HYMAI, thereby silencing their expression. Paternal alleles are not methylated and are expressed. Disease occurs through either loss of the methylation imprint that silences the maternal allele or a rearrangement that results in duplication and overexpression of the paternal allele. See Establishing the Diagnosis for genetic mechanisms.
All 6q24-TNDM mechanisms described result in overexpression of PLAGL1. In most human fetal tissues, PLAGL1 is paternally expressed due to lack of paternal methylation within the DMR [Varrault et al 2001]. No enhancers or insulators of the region have been identified. In adult tissues, paternal expression is restricted to a minority of tissues such as skin fibroblasts. Biallelic expression results from an alternative non-imprinted promoter, 55 kb upstream of the imprinted promoter [Valleley et al 2007]. Many PLAGL1 transcript variants differing in the 5' UTR and encoding two different isoforms are known for this gene.
The mechanism whereby PLAGL1 overexpression causes transient early diabetes mellitus is not fully understood. PLAGL1 codes for a zinc finger protein and overexpression causes cell cycle arrest and apoptosis in cell lines; PLAGL1 regulates the pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide receptor (PACAP1), which stimulates insulin secretion. Downstream targets of PLAGL1 are not fully characterized, although Arima et al [2005] showed that PLAGL1 binds to the CpG island in KCNQ1OT1, which negatively regulates CDKN1C. Varrault et al [2006] showed that PLAGL1 is an important member of a cellular network of imprinted genes involved in fetal growth.
A mouse model for TNDM [Ma et al 2004] demonstrated impaired glucose homeostasis in mice with overexpression of plagl1 and showed a downregulation of pdx-1, a key transcription factor vital for normal pancreatic development. Although beta cell mass was reduced in fetal mice, it had recovered by the time of birth; nonetheless, insulin response to hyperglycemia was decreased. It is hypothesized that the beta cell mass is not sufficient to respond during times of excessive physiologic stress, resulting in "breakthrough" diabetes with intercurrent illnesses and sometimes with increasing age.
In keeping with this hypothesis, Valerio et al [2004] have demonstrated in 6q24-TNDM a specific defect of insulin secretion after glucose stimulation. Furthermore, insulin secretion is possible through the stimulatory G protein pathway.
At the molecular level, the picture is complicated by paternally expressed HYMAI, which overlaps PLAGL1 and the 6q24-TNDM DMR. HYMAI lacks an open reading frame and is not translated. It may regulate PLAGL1 expression; its relationship to PLAGL1 and 6q24-TNDM is not yet known.
In fibroblasts from an individual with transient neonatal diabetes mellitus, the monoallelic expression of both PLAGL1 and HYMAI was relaxed, providing strong supportive evidence that the presence of two unmethylated alleles of this locus is indeed associated with the inappropriate expression of neighboring genes [Mackay et al 2002]. The PLAGL1 promoter is localized to the CpG island harboring the methylation imprint associated with 6q24-TNDM, and methylation of this promoter silences its activity [Varrault et al 2001].
ZFP57
Gene structure. The transcript NM_001109809.2 has four coding exons. For a detailed summary of gene and protein information, see Table A, Gene.
Pathogenic variants.
ZFP57 missense, nonsense, and frameshift pathogenic variants have been identified [Mackay et al 2008].
Normal gene product. The protein product (ZFP57; NP_001103279.2) of ZFP57 has 53 amino acid residues. It is a Kruppel-associated box (KRAB)-containing protein with seven zinc fingers that functions as a transcriptional regulator.
Abnormal gene product. Biallelic pathogenic ZFP57 variants result in inactivation of ZFP57, a protein important in maintaining genomic imprinting at the DMR of PLAGL1 and HYMAI.