Diabetes 52:2433-2440, 2003 © 2003 by the American Diabetes Association, Inc. Insights Into the Biochemical and Genetic Basis of Glucokinase Activation From Naturally Occurring Hypoglycemia Mutations
1 Department of Diabetes & Vascular Medicine, Peninsula Medical School, Exeter, U.K
Glucokinase (GCK) is a key regulatory enzyme in the pancreatic ß-cell and catalyzes the rate-limiting step for ß-cell glucose metabolism. We report two novel GCK mutations (T65I and W99R) that have arisen de novo in two families with familial hypoglycemia. Insulin levels, although inappropriately high for the degree of hypoglycemia, remain regulated by fluctuations in glycemia, and pancreatic histology was normal. These mutations are within the recently identified heterotropic allosteric activator site in the theoretical model of human ß-cell glucokinase. Functional analysis of the purified recombinant glutathionyl S-transferase fusion proteins of T65I and W99R GCK revealed that the kinetic changes result in a relative increased activity index (a measure of the enzymes phosphorylating potential) of 9.81 and 6.36, respectively, compared with wild-type. The predicted thresholds for glucose-stimulated insulin release using mathematical modeling were 3.1 (T65I) and 2.8 (W99R) mmol/l, which were in line with the patients fasting glucose. In conclusion, we have identified two novel spontaneous GCK-activating mutations whose clinical phenotype clearly differs from mutations in ATP-sensitive K+ channel genes. In vitro studies confirm the validity of structural and functional models of GCK and the putative allosteric activator site, which is a potential drug target for the treatment of type 2 diabetes.
Glucokinase (GCK) is a key regulatory enzyme in the pancreatic ß-cell. It plays a crucial role in the regulation of insulin secretion and has been termed the pancreatic ß-cell sensor (1). Given its central role in the regulation of insulin release, it is understandable that mutations in the gene encoding glucokinase (GCK) can cause both hyper- and hypoglycemia. Heterozygous inactivating mutations in GCK cause maturity-onset diabetes of the young (MODY), in which mild hyperglycemia is present at birth but often only detected later in life during screening for other purposes (2,3). Homozygous inactivating GCK mutations result in a more severe phenotype presenting at birth as permanent neonatal diabetes (4). Two heterozygous activating GCK mutations have been reported (V455M and A456V) that cause hypoglycemia (5,6). These mutations are in close proximity to each other both genetically (neighboring codons in exon 10) and structurally; they are adjacent to each other in the structural model of GCK (6). Studies that have investigated the overexpression of hepatic GCK in mice (7,8,9,10,11) have shown a lowering of plasma glucose concentrations, suggesting that enhancement of GCK activity could be a therapeutic strategy for the treatment of diabetes. However, the majority of these studies (9,10,11) have also shown that the decrease in plasma glucose concentration is accompanied by an undesirable increase in serum triglycerides. The discovery of inactivating and activating GCK mutations and their functional characterization has led to important concepts that explain essential characteristics of glucose-stimulated insulin release (GSIR). In this study, we present two novel spontaneous activating GCK mutations, detailed functional characterization of these mutations, and the clinical characteristics of the families. These have led to important insights into the biochemical activation and regulation of GCK and the clinical phenotype of individuals with hypoglycemia due to GCK activation.
Subjects Family 1. The proband is a boy born at term (birth weight 3.13 kg) from a nonconsanguineous Dutch Caucasian family. He had neonatal hypoglycemia with blood glucose values between 2.0 and 2.6 mmol/l. He was asymptomatic and received no treatment. At age 15 years he presented with seizures and was found to have a fasting blood glucose of 2.3 mmol/l and an insulin level of 56 pmol/l. At this time he weighed 53 kg and had a BMI of 17.8 kg/m2. Fasting blood glucose values before treatment ranged between 2.3 and 3.0 mmol/l. During normal feeds his blood glucose values ranged between 3.3 and 5.8 mmol/l, and his insulin levels were 230323 pmol/l. He was treated with diazoxide 100 mg b.i.d., which resulted in an increase in blood glucose to 4.24.6 mmol/l. Frequent meals reduced his mild clinical symptoms of hypoglycemia. The probands mother had a history of seizures from age 15 years and was diagnosed with consistent fasting hypoglycemia at age 20 years. Her insulin level (93 pmol/l) was inappropriate for her hypoglycemia (2.2 mmol/l). When she was treated with a resection of the head of the pancreas, there was a slight increase in her blood glucose. At age 35 years a trial of treatment with diazoxide was commenced, which normalized her blood glucose levels but was discontinued due to the development of hypertrichosis. Histological examination of her pancreas showed normal histology with no hyperplasia, no hypertrophied insulin cells, and regular-sized islets of Langerhans. The probands father, maternal grandparents, and mothers five siblings had normal fasting glucose levels.
Family 2. The probands father presented with symptoms suggestive of hypoglycemia following his sons diagnosis, and a random blood glucose was 2.8 mmol/l. Following this, a formal prolonged oral glucose tolerance test was performed that showed fasting, 30-, 60-, 90-, 120-, 150-, and 180-min glucose values of 3.1, 7.5, 3.3, 2.1, 2.1, 2.1, and 2.2 mmol/l, respectively. During the time when these lower blood glucose levels were found, the probands father felt tired and hungry with occasional sweatiness but never lost consciousness. Six months after the oral glucose tolerance test he underwent a 48-h fast. He had several blood glucose values during this time, and they were all 2.73.0 mmol/l. During the fast his insulin levels were suppressed from 16 to <10 pmol/l, and C-peptide fell from 613 to 301 pmol/l. Outside of formal testing, the probands father had no symptoms of hypoglycemia, and a magnetic resonance imaging scan of his pancreas was normal. The probands father has been untreated for 18 months, and fasting plasma glucose value measured 3.1 mmol/l. At this time liver function tests were normal. The probands mother, paternal uncle, and paternal grandparents had no symptoms of hypoglycemia. They all had normal fasting glucose values except for the paternal grandfather, who had a fasting glucose value of 6.5 mmol/l. Lipid measurements for all subjects are shown in Table 1.
Identification of GCK gene mutations. Genomic DNA was extracted from peripheral lymphocytes using a Wizard DNA extraction kit (Promega, Southampton, U.K.). The coding regions of the 10 exons and the intron-exon boundaries of GCK were amplified by PCR using published primer sequences. PCR products were purified using QIAquick PCR purification columns (Qiagen, Crawley, U.K.), and both strands were sequenced using a BigDye terminator cycle sequencing kit (Applied Biosystems, Warrington, U.K.) according to the manufacturers recommendations. Reactions were analyzed on an ABI 377 DNA sequencer (Applied Biosystems). The relationships between the samples in each family were confirmed using a panel of 10 microsatellite markers.
Kinetic analysis.
Structural analysis.
Mathematical modeling. The kinetic data were used to calculate the glucose threshold for GSIR using a mathematical model previously described (1). This model predicts the threshold for GSIR by using the kinetic characteristics of the normal or mutated GCK enzyme and by accepting a few plausible assumptions. First, ß-cell GCK serves as the glucose sensor that controls GSIR. Second, the physiological threshold for GSIR for wild-type GCK is 5 mmol/l, and therefore 26% of total GCK phosphorylating capacity is needed to initiate insulin secretion. Third, the glucose dependency of ß-cell glucose phosphorylation rate is defined by the Hill equation. The ATP dependency of ß-cell glucose phosphorylation rate is defined by an expression based on Michaelis-Menton kinetics. The two equations can be combined to describe two-substrate kinetics of GCK. Finally, there is altered expression of both the mutant and wild-type GCK alleles due to adaptation to the blood glucose concentration (1,15,16). The following expression coefficient describes the relationship: e = (Sh x 2)/(Sh + S0.5h), where S refers to the glucose level at threshold, h is the Hill number for cooperativeness with glucose, the numerical value 2 indicates that half maximal induction is achieved at glucose S0.5, and S0.5 refers to the concentration of glucose needed to achieve half maximal rate of phosphorylation (1).
Sequencing of GCK. Direct sequencing of the entire coding region and exon-intron boundaries of GCK was performed in the probands from both families. In family 1, a heterozygous missense mutation substituting isoleucine for threonine at codon 65 (T65I) in exon 2 was identified. This mutation was subsequently identified in the probands affected mother but not in the probands normoglycemic father, maternal grandparents, and five maternal aunts and uncles. Analysis of the 10 microsatellite markers confirmed the family relationships, establishing that the mutation was a spontaneous mutation in the probands mother. In family 2, a heterozygous missense mutation substituting arginine for tryptophan at codon 99 (W99R) in exon 3 was identified in the proband. This mutation was present in the probands affected father but not in the probands normoglycemic mother, paternal grandparents, or paternal uncle. Microsatellite analysis confirmed family relationships and established that this was a spontaneous mutation in the father. Neither of these mutations has been found in 200 normal chromosomes.
Biochemical characterization of T65I and W99R.
Structural analysis. Structural analysis of T65I and W99R showed that they were in close proximity to the previously published, naturally occurring activating mutations (V455M and A456V) and the artificially created mutations (D158A and Y214A) that increase the glucose affinity and/or Kcat. All of these mutations are located in a putative allosteric activator site (Fig. 1). This domain is remote from the substrate binding cleft for glucose and MgATP. This region has been termed the heterotropic allosteric activator site.
Mathematical modeling.
The identification of mutations in the GCK gene has significantly increased our understanding of the GCK glucose-sensor paradigm for glucose homeostasis. The discovery and functional characterization of the two novel activating mutations reported in this study has given us the opportunity for further investigation and discussion of this model. In addition, it has increased the number of reported cases of hyperinsulinemia of infancy due to GCK mutations (GCK-HI) and hence our understanding of this disorder, thus allowing us to make comparisons between the different phenotypic presentations and clinical courses of GCK-HI and the cases with the most common cause, mutations in the KATP channel genes (SUR1/ABCC8 and Kir6.2/KCNJ11). In the current study we have described two novel GCK-activating mutations and have shown that both are de novo in the second generation of the families tested. There are only two previous reports of a spontaneous mutation in the GCK gene (17,18). In addition to the lack of family history, the subclinical symptoms of this condition may hinder diagnosis. Although GCK-HI is a subtype of hyperinsulinemia of infancy, it is important to note the differences in the clinical characteristics of these patients compared with those with mutations in the ATP-sensitive K+ (KATP) channel genes. These differences have been summarized in Table 3. Mutations in the KATP channel genes result in unregulated secretion of insulin due to a defective KATP channel, but activating mutations in GCK result in a "resetting" of the GSIR threshold, while insulin secretion remains regulated. This is clearly shown in our patients whose insulin levels are suppressed and increased with fluctuations in glycemia around the normal fasting level and whose glucose values are consistently low (Fig. 3). In patients with GCK-HI the fasting insulin levels are in the normal range (21114 pmol/l) and counterregulation is normal rather than increased. We predict that these patients, like those with inactivating mutations resulting in MODY2, will have a stable phenotype throughout life with a very gradual increase in fasting glucose in line with the normal population. A further clear phenotypic difference is that the head of the pancreas was histologically normal in the probands mother in family 1, while in HI due to KATP channel gene mutations there is diffuse hyperplasia with hypertrophied insulin cells and irregular-sized islets of Langerhans.
The differences in phenotype begin in utero, SUR1/Kir6.2-HI babies are born large for gestational age, but the GCK-HI children do not show increased birth weight. In some cases, e.g., family 1, this is because the mother was hypoglycemic during pregnancy [similar to the normal weight seen when the mother and fetus inherit an inactivating mutation, and the baby is normal birth weight (22)]. The treatment of these two forms of HI differs. Patients with SUR1/Kir6.2-HI respond poorly to potassium channel openers, such as diazoxide, whereas GCK-HI patients respond to or tolerate diazoxide. Because insulin secretion is regulated as long as blood glucose is not low enough to precipitate seizures and neuroglycopenia, no intervention may be required. This is seen in the father of family 2, who is asymptomatic despite having a lifetime of untreated fasting glucose values between 2.7 and 3.1 mmol/l. Activating mutations with kinetic changes that result in higher relative activities than those described in patients to date can be predicted from the artificial mutations with more dramatic increases in relative activity indexes (23). Such severe mutant enzymes, although still regulated by glucose, may result in more pronounced hypoglycemia, and patients might not respond sufficiently to diazoxide and have severe neuroglycopenic symptoms. Familial cases are less likely with these severe mutations, as the marked ill health is likely to greatly reduce lifespan and reproductive fitness. There has been some debate as to whether patients with neonatal hyperinsulinemia are more likely to develop type 2 diabetes later in life. A recent study (21) carried out in an extended Finnish family has illustrated that mutations in the SUR1 (ABCC8) gene can present as hypoglycemia during infancy and diabetes in early adulthood. However, it is not known whether this is the case with GCK-activating mutations. We suggest that since the defect is in glucose sensing rather than excess insulin secretion, this is not likely to result in the "ß-cell exhaustion" seen in KATP channel mutations (21). None of the mutation carriers in the two families presented in this study have developed diabetes; however, the oldest is only 47 years of age. In the two previously reported cases, a family member of each family has developed diabetes later in life, but it was not known if these individuals had an activating mutation (5,6). This was likely in the V455M family, as the probands father developed diabetes at age 48 years and had a history of hypoglycemia. Further longitudinal studies are required to investigate this. The different clinical presentations of the two affected individuals from family 2 is also interesting. The proband presented at birth with severe recurrent hypoglycemia requiring multiple therapy, whereas his father was asymptomatic and presented only after his sons diagnosis. This has also been reported in the A456V family (6). It may be that there is a phenotypic modification by other environmental or genetic factors. However, it is also possible that some variation in the clinical presentation of father and son may represent a different approach of the physicians management of asymptomatic hypoglycemia in these cases. The localization of the novel mutations in exons 2 and 3 in a structural model of GCK revealed that they were in close proximity to the previously described, naturally occurring mutations (V455M and A456V) in exon 10. Along with the clustering of artificially created mutations in exons 4 and 6 (D158A and Y214A) in this region (23,24), this finding adds further scientific evidence for the presence of a heterotropic allosteric activator site. The discovery of this site suggests that it is possible that an undiscovered endogenous activator molecule exists that acts through this site. The discovery of pharmacological agents that activate GCK in a similar way to these mutations suggests that they may be acting through this site (25). Since this site is remote from the substrate-binding cleft, it suggests that the "putative" activator is structurally different from the substrate. The clinical characteristics of patients with GCK-activating mutations have important implications for any therapeutic agents targeted at this heterotropic allosteric activator site in GCK. Overexpression of hepatic GCK in mice has raised the issue of elevated serum triglycerides (9,10,11). None of the affected mutation carriers in this study had adverse lipid profiles. Apart from mildly raised serum triglyceride, the lipid profiles of the affected individuals with the A456V mutation were also in the normal range (6). These observations do not support a deleterious effect on a patients lipid profile. Activation of GCK catalysis by the mutations D158A, Y214A, V455M, and A456V is the result of lowering of glucose S0.5, increasing Kcat, and reducing the Hill coefficient for glucose either separately or in combination. The kinetic changes result in a near hyperbolic enzyme, which contrasts with the catalytically less active sigmoidal wild-type GCK. Kinetic analysis of mutant T65I and W99R GCK showed that the mutations have different kinetic consequences. The decrease in maximal activity, Kcat, for T65I was the opposite of what had been predicted. With the previous activating mutations, the Kcat increased or remained unchanged. However, the dramatic reduction in S0.5 is more than sufficient to account for the increased activity of the enzyme. W99R is also unusual in that it is the first of the naturally occurring or artificially created activating mutations to have a significantly increased ATP Km. This decrease in affinity for the substrate MgATP explains in part the relative activity of the enzyme, since the phosphorylation of glucose may be limited by the decreased affinity for the second substrate. The most active mutants are those with large increases in Kcat and substantial decreases in S0.5 (Y214A and A456V). These enzymes have much higher relative activity indexes (164 and 34, respectively) compared with those with less dramatic changes in both parameters (W99R, T65I, D158A, and V455M at 6.36, 9.81, 10.8, and 15.7, respectively).
We used a mathematical model to predict the threshold for GSIR in heterozygous carriers of mutant T65I and W99R GCK. This model takes into consideration the adaptation of both the mutant and wild-type alleles to blood glucose concentration. In MODY2, increased blood glucose levels favor increased expression of the wild-type allele that compensates for the decreased relative activity of the mutant allele. However, in HI the decreased blood glucose concentration favors adaptation of the mutant allele. If this model genuinely reflects what is happening in vivo, then it is possible that unlike MODY2 mutations, which have a predicted threshold for GSIR of In conclusion, we have identified two novel GCK-activating mutations that cause hyperinsulinemia of infancy. This study illustrates that activating GCK mutations may often be spontaneous. Our families and the two previously published families illustrate clear phenotypic differences between GCK-HI and SUR1/Kir6.2-HI. This study provides further support for the current structural model of GCK, as we have shown that both novel mutations are in close proximity to the previously identified, naturally occurring, and artificially created activating mutations in the proposed heterotropic allosteric activator site. Functional characterization of these mutations has shown that the changes to the kinetic properties of these enzymes will reduce the threshold for GSIR, thus leading to hypoglycemia. Finally, the different kinetic properties of these two mutant enzymes provide insight into the nature of the allosteric heterotropic activator site, which is a potential drug target for the treatment of type 2 diabetes.
A.L.G. is supported by the European Grant Genomic Integrated Force for Diabetes (GIFT QLG2-1999-00), a European Foundation for the Study of Diabetes Travel Fellowship, and the National Institutes of Health (NIDDK 22122). A.T.H. is a Wellcome Trust Clinical Research Leave Fellow. The authors acknowledge Dr. Christopher J.H. Kelnar and Dr. Louise E. Bath for their role in the clinical management of the proband from family 2 and Dr. Gerlach F.F.M. Pieters for his role in the clinical management of the probands mother from family 1. Address correspondence and reprint requests to Professor Andrew T. Hattersley, Diabetes and Vascular Medicine, Peninsula Medical School, Barrack Road, Exeter, EX2 5AX U.K. E-mail: a.t.hattersley{at}exeter.ac.uk Received for publication April 8, 2003 and accepted in revised form June 3, 2003
Abbreviations: GCK, glucokinase; GSIR, glucose-stimulated insulin release; GST, glutathionyl S-transferase; KATP, ATP-sensitive K+; MODY, maturity-onset diabetes of the young
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