Naturally Occurring Genetic Variation Influences the Severity of Drosophila Eye Degeneration Induced by Expression of a Mutant Human Insulin Gene
Sarah Carl

TL;DR
This study uses Drosophila models to investigate how natural genetic variation influences the severity of eye degeneration caused by a mutant human insulin gene, providing insights into complex genetic disease variability.
Contribution
It introduces a novel Drosophila-based approach to study the impact of natural genetic variation on disease phenotypes caused by a specific insulin mutation.
Findings
Significant variation in eye phenotype across different genetic backgrounds.
Genetic background affects severity and penetrance of the induced eye degeneration.
Natural genetic variation modulates the phenotypic expression of a human disease mutation.
Abstract
Dominant negative mutations in the insulin gene are the second most common cause of permanent neonatal diabetes. However, variation in severity and penetrance of neonatal diabetes, as in other complex genetic diseases, cannot be accounted for by known disease mutations. In a novel approach to this problem, we have utilized the genetic tools available in Drosophila to model the effects of the C96Y mutation, a cysteine to tyrosine mutation in the insulin protein that can cause permanent neonatal diabetes in humans. This mutation, which disrupts a disulfide bridge in the proinsulin molecule, has been shown to lead to partial protein unfolding and aggregation in the endoplasmic reticulum. It is thought to induce beta cell death in humans and mice through endoplasmic reticulum stress-mediated apoptosis. We employed the UAS/GAL4 system to create a stable fly laboratory stock expressing human…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPancreatic function and diabetes · Endoplasmic Reticulum Stress and Disease · Calcium signaling and nucleotide metabolism
