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Insulin resistance uncoupled from dyslipidemia due to C-terminal PIK3R1 mutations

Authors :
Huang-Doran, Isabel
Tomlinson, Patsy
Payne, Felicity
Gast, Alexandra
Sleigh, Alison
Bottomley, William
Harris, Julie
Daly, Allan
Rocha, Nuno
Rudge, Simon
Clark, Jonathan
Kwok, Albert
Romeo, Stefano
McCann, Emma
Müksch, Barbara
Dattani, Mehul
Zucchini, Stefano
Wakelam, Michael
Foukas, Lazaros C
Savage, David B
Murphy, Rinki
O'Rahilly, Stephen
Barroso, Inês
Semple, Robert K
Publisher :
American Society for Clinical Investigation

Abstract

Obesity-related insulin resistance is associated with fatty liver, dyslipidemia, and low plasma adiponectin. Insulin resistance due to insulin receptor (INSR) dysfunction is associated with none of these, but when due to dysfunction of the downstream kinase AKT2 phenocopies obesity-related insulin resistance. We report 5 patients with SHORT syndrome and C-terminal mutations in PIK3R1, encoding the p85α/p55α/p50α subunits of PI3K, which act between INSR and AKT in insulin signaling. Four of 5 patients had extreme insulin resistance without dyslipidemia or hepatic steatosis. In 3 of these 4, plasma adiponectin was preserved, as in insulin receptor dysfunction. The fourth patient and her healthy mother had low plasma adiponectin associated with a potentially novel mutation, p.Asp231Ala, in adiponectin itself. Cells studied from one patient with the p.Tyr657X PIK3R1 mutation expressed abundant truncated PIK3R1 products and showed severely reduced insulin-stimulated association of mutant but not WT p85α with IRS1, but normal downstream signaling. In 3T3-L1 preadipocytes, mutant p85α overexpression attenuated insulin-induced AKT phosphorylation and adipocyte differentiation. Thus, PIK3R1 C-terminal mutations impair insulin signaling only in some cellular contexts and produce a subphenotype of insulin resistance resembling INSR dysfunction but unlike AKT2 dysfunction, implicating PI3K in the pathogenesis of key components of the metabolic syndrome.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........95e6f3317f1f240b778b99009a63ef77