GCK, glucokinase, 2645

N. diseases: 210; N. variants: 182
Source: ALL
Disease Score gda Association Type Type Original DB Sentence supporting the association PMID PMID Year
CUI: C1720983
Disease: Channelopathies
Channelopathies
0.030 GeneticVariation disease BEFREE The major causes are channelopathies, the other forms are rare and being caused by mutations in genes such as GCK. 28247534 2017
CUI: C1720983
Disease: Channelopathies
Channelopathies
0.030 GeneticVariation disease BEFREE In contrast to focal islet-cell hyperplasia, always sporadic to our knowledge, diffuse hyperinsulinism is a heterogeneous disorder involving several genes, various mechanisms of pathogenic mutations and different transmissions: (i) channelopathy involving the genes encoding the sulphonylurea receptor (SUR1) or the inward-rectifying potassium channel (Kir6.2) in recessively inherited HI or more rarely dominantly inherited HI; (ii) metabolic disorders implicating the short-chain L-3-hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase (SCHAD) enzyme inrecessively inherited HI, the glucokinase gene (GK), the glutamate dehydrogenase gene (GLUD1) when hyperammonemia is associated, dominant exercise-induced HI with still-unknown mechanism, and more recently the human insulin receptor gene in dominantly inherited hyperinsulinism. 15868462 2005
CUI: C1720983
Disease: Channelopathies
Channelopathies
0.030 GeneticVariation disease BEFREE This can manifest as 'channelopathies' of K(ATP) channels through gene defects in ABCC8 and KCNJ11 (Ch.11p15); or as a result of 'metabolopathies' through defects in the genes encoding glucokinase (GCK, Ch.7p15-p13), glutamate dehydrogenase (GLUD1, Ch.10q23.3) and short-chain L-3-hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase (HADHSC, Ch.4q22-q26). 14981344 2004