Published April 23, 2013 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Gain-of-Function Mutations in the KATP Channel (KCNJ11) Impair Coordinated Hand-Eye Tracking

  • 1. University of Oxford
  • 2. University of Chicago
  • 3. University of Exeter

Description

Background: Gain-of-function mutations in the ATP-sensitive potassium channel can cause permanent neonatal diabetes mellitus (PNDM) or neonatal diabetes accompanied by a constellation of neurological symptoms (iDEND syndrome). Studies of a mouse model of iDEND syndrome revealed that cerebellar Purkinje cell electrical activity was impaired and that the mice exhibited poor motor coordination. In this study, we probed the hand-eye coordination of PNDM and iDEND patients using visual tracking tasks to see if poor motor coordination is also a feature of the human disease.

Methods: Control participants (n = 14), patients with iDEND syndrome (n = 6 or 7), and patients with PNDM (n = 7) completed three computer-based tasks in which a moving target was tracked with a joystick-controlled cursor. Patients with PNDM and iDEND were being treated with sulphonylurea drugs at the time of testing.

Results: No differences were seen between PNDM patients and controls. Patients with iDEND syndrome were significantly less accurate than controls in two of the three tasks. The greatest differences were seen when iDEND patients tracked blanked targets, i.e. when predictive tracking was required. In this task, iDEND patients incurred more discrepancy errors (p = 0.009) and more velocity errors (p  = 0.009) than controls.

Conclusions: These results identify impaired hand-eye coordination as a new clinical feature of iDEND. The aetiology of this feature is likely to involve cerebellar dysfunction. The data further suggest that sulphonylurea doses that control the diabetes of these patients may be insufficient to fully correct their neurological symptoms.

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Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1371/journal.pone.0062646
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:10558

Funding

Wellcome Trust
Royal Society
Research Professorship
European Union
Medical Research Council
PhD studentship
Medical Research Council
Parkinson's Disease UK
Oxford Biomedical Research Centre
National Institutes of Health
Clinical and Translational Science Awards
Diabetes Research and Training Center
P60 DK020595
Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation
9-2008-177
Lewis-Sebring Family Foundation
Kovler Family Foundation

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Biological Sciences Division
Department(s)
Medicine, Pediatrics