| Literature DB >> 17694559 |
Birgit Köhler1, Lin Lin, Bruno Ferraz-de-Souza, Peter Wieacker, Peter Heidemann, Vanessa Schröder, Heike Biebermann, Dirk Schnabel, Annette Grüters, John C Achermann.
Abstract
Steroidogenic factor 1 (SF1, NR5A1) is a nuclear receptor that regulates multiple genes involved in adrenal and gonadal development, steroidogenesis, and the reproductive axis. Human mutations in SF1 were initially found in two 46,XY female patients with severe gonadal dysgenesis and primary adrenal failure. However, more recent case reports have suggested that heterozygous mutations in SF1 may also be found in patients with 46,XY partial gonadal dysgenesis and underandrogenization but normal adrenal function. We have analyzed the gene encoding SF1 (NR5A1) in a cohort of 27 patients with 46,XY disorders of sex development (DSD) from the German network of DSD. Heterozygous SF1 mutations were found in 5 out of 27 (18.5%) of cases. Four patients with SF1 mutations presented with the similar phenotype of mild gonadal dysgenesis, severe underandrogenization, and absent Müllerian structures. Of these, two patients harbored missense mutations within the DNA-binding region of SF1 (p.C33S, p.R84H), one patient had a nonsense mutation (p.Y138X) and one patient had a frameshift mutation (c.1277dupT) predicted to disrupt RNA stability or protein function. One additional patient ([c.424_427dupCCCA]+[p.G146A]) displayed a more marked phenotype of severe gonadal dysgenesis, normal female external genitalia, and Müllerian structures. Functional studies of the missense mutants (p.C33S, p.R84H) and of one nonsense mutant (p.Y138X) revealed impaired transcriptional activation of SF1-responsive target genes. To date, adrenal insufficiency has not occurred in any of the patients. Thus, SF1 mutations are a relatively frequent cause of 46,XY DSD in humans. (c) 2007 Wiley-Liss, Inc.Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 17694559 PMCID: PMC2359628 DOI: 10.1002/humu.20588
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Mutat ISSN: 1059-7794 Impact factor: 4.878
Phenotypes, Genotypes, and Hormonal Data of the FIve Patients*
| Patient | Age (years) | External genitalia | Uterus | Epididymis and vas deferens | Gonada histology | Testosterone levels at diagnosis | Gender assignment | Adrenal investigations (at current age) | Mutation | Parents |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 4 | Clitoromegaly urogenital sinus, inguinal gonads | No | Yes | Bilateral testes, Sertoli rich, few spermatogonia and Leydig cells | hCG stimulation at birth: testosterone <0.08→0.07 ng/ml | ♀ | Cortisol 3.6 µg/dl DHEAS 50 ng/ml ACTH 25 pg/ml | p.C33S(c. 98G>C, exon 2) | Mother: normal; father: normal |
| 2 | 17 | Citoromegaly urogenital sinus, inguinal gonads | No | Yes | Bilateral testes | hCG stimulation at 2 years: testosterone <0.01→2.5ng/ml | ♀ | Corsitol 7.4 to 24.9µg/dl | p.R84H (c.251G>A, exon 4) | Mother: normal; father; NA |
| 3 | 10 | Clitoromegaly, urogenital sinus inguinal gonads | No | Yes | Bilateral testes Sertoli cells only | At birth: testosterone 0.25ng/ml | ♀ | Cortisol 7.2µg/dl DHEAS 891ng/ml | pY138X(c414C>A, exon 4) | Mother: normal; father; NA |
| 4 | 8 | Clitoromegaly urogenital sinus, inguinal gonads | No | Yes | Bilateral testes | hCG stimulation at birth;testostrrone 0.86→.086ng/ml | ♀ | Cortisol 6.7 µg/dl DHEAS 548ng/ml | c1277dupT(exon 7) | Mother: c1277 dupT; father: NA |
| 5 | 22 | Normal female, no aplpable gonads | Yes | Not known | Bilateral streak gonads | At 22 years: LH 25.8U/I FSH 111.9U/I estradiol 7pg/ml testosterone 0.2 nd/ml | ♀ | NA | c424_427 dupCCCA+p.G146A polymorphism(c.437G>C)(both exon 4) | Mother: NA; father; NA |
Normal ranges: basal cortisol, 3–15 µg/dl (<0.5–10 years); DHEAS, <50–352 ng/ml (0.5–7 years), 75–1,312 ng/ml (7–10 years), 150–4,400 ng/ml (>10 years); ACTH, 9–50 pg/ml. Conversion to SI units: testosterone ng/ml×3.47 for nmol/l; cortisol µg/dl×27.6 for nmol/l; DHEAS ng/ml×2.56 for nmol/l; ACTH pg/ml×0.22 for pmol/l.DNA mutation numbering is based on the GenBank reference DNA sequence NM_004959.3 using current guidelines (www.hgvs.org/mutnomen) and with the A of the ATG initiation codon designated +1.
Peak cortisol following synacthen stimulation.“At birth” refers to the first week of life. ACTH, adrenocorticotropin; NA, not analyzed.
FIGURE 1Structure of SF1 including the position of SF1 mutations in 46,XYpatients with disorders of sex development. p.G35E and p.R92Q are the first mutations described in SF1 in 46,XY individuals with gonadal dysgenesis and adrenal failure. p.R255L was found in a normal 46,XX female with adrenal failure.The othermutations have been identified in individuals with 46,XY DSD without adrenal insufficiency.The five novel mutations reported here are boxed. DNA RefSeq NM_004959.3.
FIGURE 2DNA binding, expression, and cellular localization of SF1. A: Electromobility shift assay showing wild–type (WT) and mutant SF1 binding to a labeled probe corresponding to the 3′ SF1 binding site of the Cyp11a promoter. in-vitro translated empty vector (−) (lane 1) and an excess of unlabeled cold probe (with WT SF1 protein) (lane 7) were used as controls. B:Cellular localization of GFP–SF1 fusion proteins (green), generated and expressed in tsa 201 cells using a pAcGFP–C1 vector. Nuclear counterstaining was performed with DAPI (blue), and images merged to conform nuclear localization.WT SF1 showed strong nuclear localization, with relative nucleolar exclusion and very occasional nuclear subfoci. A similar expression and localization pattern to WT was seen for the p.R84H mutant. Clustering in larger subnuclear foci was seen in the cells transfected with the p.C33S mutant.The p.Y138 Xmutant showed di¡use nuclear localization.
FIGURE 3A: Effect of the SF1 mutants on transcriptional activity of the minimal promoters of Cyp11a in tsa 201 cells as described in themethods section. B: Effect of the SF1 mutants on synergistic activation of the LH beta promoter bySF1 and Egr1.C,D: Effect of the SF1 mutants on transcriptional activity of the Cyp11a and MIS promoter in TM3 (mouse Leydig) and TM4 (mouse Sertoli) cells, respectively. E: Studies of a potential dominant negative e¡ect ofmutant SF1 were performed by transfecting increasing amounts of wild–type (WT) ormutant SF1 (p.C33S, p.R84H, p.Y138X) expression vector (0,1,2,5,10 ng) with1–ng empty vector (−) or1–ngWT (1) and a Cyp11a promoter reporter (100 ng) in tsa 201cells. Additional empty vector was transfected to keep DNA quantities consistent.Data represent the mean 7± standard error of themean (SEM) of three independent experiments, each performed in triplicate.
Molecular and Clinical Features of 46, XY Individuals With in SF1(NR5A1)
| Mutatiion | Occurence | Inheritance | Adrenal failure | External genitalia | Testicular dysgenesis | Müllerian structures | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| p.G35E | Heterozygous | De novo | + | Female | Severe | + | Achermann etal[1999] |
| p.R92Q | Homozygous | Recessive | + | Female | Not known | + | Achermann etal [2002] |
| c.424_427 dupCCCA+p.G146A | Heterozygous+ polymorphismxs | Not known | − | Female | Severe | + | This report |
| p.M781 | Heterozygous | SLD | − | Female | Mild | (+) | Liin et al [2007] |
| p.V15M | Heterozygous | De novo | − | Female | Mild | − | Liin et al [2007] |
| p.C16X | Heterozygous | De novo | − | Ambiguous | Mild | + | Mallet et al [2004] |
| p.C91S | Heterozygous | SLD | − | Ambiguous | Mild | (+) | Lin et al [2007] |
| c.18delC | Heterozygous | De novo | − | Amdiguous | Mild | − | Has egawa et al [2004] |
| c.1058_1065del AGCTGGTG | Heterozygous | De novo | − | Ambiguous | Regressed | − | Correa et al.[2004] |
| p.C33S | Heterozygous | De novo | − | Ambiguous | Mild | − | This report |
| p.R84H | Heterozygous | De novo | − | Ambiguous | Normal | − | This report |
| p.Y138X | Heterozygous | De novo | − | Ambiguous | Mild | − | This report |
| c.1277dupT | Heterozygous | SLD | − | Ambiguous | Normal | − | This report |
| p.L437Q | Heterozygous | De novo | − | Hypospadias | Mild | − | Lin et al.[2007] |
Gonadal tissue not found at laparoscopy at age 31 years
SLD, sex-limited dominant
+, present
−, absent
(+), remnant present