Tpit is a highly cell-restricted transcription factor that is required for expression of the pro-opiomelanocortin (POMC) gene and for terminal differentiation of the pituitary corticotroph lineage. Its exclusive expression in pituitary POMC-expressing cells has suggested that its mutation may cause isolated deficiency of pituitary adrenocorticotropin (ACTH). We now show that Tpit-deficient mice constitute a model of isolated ACTH deficiency (IAD) that is very similar to human IAD patients carrying TPIT gene mutations. Through genetic analysis of a panel of IAD patients, we show that TPIT gene mutations are associated at high frequency with early onset IAD, but not with juvenile forms of this deficiency. We identified seven different TPIT mutations, including nonsense, missense, point deletion, and a genomic deletion. This work defines congenital early onset IAD as a relatively homogeneous clinical entity caused by recessive transmission of loss-of-function mutations in the TPIT gene.
Tpit is a T box transcription factor important for terminal differentiation of pituitary proopiomelanocortin-expressing cells. We demonstrated that human and mouse mutations of the TPIT gene cause a neonatal-onset form of congenital isolated ACTH deficiency (IAD). In the absence of glucocorticoid replacement, IAD can lead to neonatal death by acute adrenal insufficiency. This clinical entity was not previously well characterized because of the small number of published cases. Since identification of the first TPIT mutations, we have enlarged our series of neonatal IAD patients to 27 patients from 21 unrelated families. We found TPIT mutations in 17 of 27 patients. We identified 10 different TPIT mutations, with one mutation found in five unrelated families. All patients appeared to be homozygous or compound heterozygous for TPIT mutations, and their unaffected parents are heterozygous carriers, confirming a recessive mode of transmission. We compared the clinical and biological phenotype of the 17 IAD patients carrying a TPIT mutation with the 10 IAD patients with normal TPIT-coding sequences. This series of neonatal IAD patients revealed a highly homogeneous clinical presentation, suggesting that this disease may be an underestimated cause of neonatal death. Identification of TPIT gene mutations as the principal molecular cause of neonatal IAD permits prenatal diagnosis for families at risk for the purpose of early glucocorticoid replacement therapy.
Recent developments in intrabronchial administration of insulin raise lung function in patients with type I diabetes as important issue. Several studies in adults report abnormalities of lung function of these patients. The aim of this study was to investigate lung function in children with type I diabetes. Twenty-seven children with type I diabetes performed measurement of airway obstruction (forced flow-volume curves), lung volumes and airway resistance (bodyplethysmography) and of pulmonary carbon monoxide diffusion capacity Mean age (+/- SD) of the children was 12.8 +/- 5 years. Mean time between the detection of type I diabetes and the lung function tests was 5.5 years with a variation from I to 17 years. The total airway resistance (Raw) was significantly higher compared to the reference values (P < 0.001). The other lung function parameters were not significantly different from reference values (P > 0.05). In this relatively small study no relationship between lung function abnormalities and age, the duration of disease or level of HbA1c was observed. Our data show that increase of airway resistance do occur in children withtype I diabetes. Progressive abnormalities in lung function might interfere with the promising results of treatment with intrabronchial administration of insulin.
Plasma somatostatin immunoreactivity (SIR) was elevated 40-fold in an insulin-treated diabetic with disseminated pancreatic carcinoma. The diagnosis of somatostatinoma was supported by histological and ultrastructural similarities between metastatic cells and pancreatic D cells. Under acid conditions, 75% of the plasma SIR eluted as a 6000- to 7000-dalton protein and 25% as synthetic somatostatin (mol wt 1600), whereas the 20-fold elevated urine SIR consisted almost exclusively of the higher molecular weight fraction. The hypersomatostatinemia was associated with reduced basal and stimulated pancreatic hormone levels, which might reflect its involvement in the steatorrhea and diabetes, and its protection against ketoacidosis. Plasma SIR rose 50% upon insulin withdrawal and 10-fold after tolbutamide injection and fell 30% after diazoxide. It is concluded that an increase in plasma and urine SIR, the presence of a 6000- to 7000-dalton SIR fraction in plasma and urine, a reduction in basal and stimulated pancreatic hormone levels, and tolbutamide-induced somatostatin release can be diagnostic for a somatostatinoma. Streptozotocin reduced tumor volume, hypersomatostatinemia, and tolbutamide-induced somatostatin release, suggesting that this drug may be useful in the treatment of disseminated somatostatinoma.
Autoimmune polyendocrinopathy-candidiasis-ectodermal dystrophy (APECED) is a rare autosomal recessive organ-specific autoimmune disorder that is characterized by a variable combination of (i) chronic mucocutaneous candidiasis, (ii) polyendocrinopathy and/or hepatitis and (iii) dystrophy of the dental enamel and nails. We analyzed the AIRE (autoimmune regulator) gene in subjects who presented any symptom that has been associated with APECED, including candidiasis and autoimmune endocrinopathy. We observed that 83.3% of patients presented at least two of the three typical manifestations of APECED, while the remaining 16.7% of patients showed other signs of the disease. Analysis of the genetic diagnosis of these subjects revealed that a considerable delay occurs in the majority of patients between the appearance of symptoms and the diagnosis. Overall, the mean diagnostic delay in our patients was 10.2 years. These results suggest that molecular analysis of AIRE should be performed in patients with relapsing mucocutaneous candidiasis for early identification of APECED.
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