| Literature DB >> 20488225 |
Liina Nagirnaja1, Kristiina Rull, Liis Uusküla, Pille Hallast, Marina Grigorova, Maris Laan.
Abstract
The follicle stimulating hormone (FSH), luteinizing hormone (LH) and chorionic gonadotropin (HCG) play a critical role in human reproduction. Despite the common evolutionary ancestry and functional relatedness of the gonadotropin hormone beta (GtHB) genes, the single-copy FSHB (at 11p13) and the multi-copy LHB/CGB genes (at 19q13.32) exhibit locus-specific differences regarding their genomic context, evolution, genetic variation and expressional profile. FSHB represents a conservative vertebrate gene with a unique function and it is located in a structurally stable gene-poor region. In contrast, the primate-specific LHB/CGB gene cluster is located in a gene-rich genomic context and demonstrates an example of evolutionary young and unstable genomic region. The gene cluster is shaped by a constant balance between selection that acts on specific functions of the loci and frequent gene conversion events among duplicons. As the transcription of the GtHB genes is rate-limiting in the assembly of respective hormones, the genomic and genetic context of the FSHB and the LHB/CGB genes largely affects the profile of the hormone production.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20488225 PMCID: PMC2954307 DOI: 10.1016/j.mce.2010.04.024
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Cell Endocrinol ISSN: 0303-7207 Impact factor: 4.102
Characteristic features of gonadotropin specific beta-subunits.
| FSH | LH | HCG | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Protein | |||
| Mature β-subunit protein | 111 amino acids | 121 amino acids | 145 amino acid |
| Time of production | Postnatal | Postnatal | Prenatal |
| Production pattern | Pulsatile | Pulsatile | Continuous |
| Biologic half-life | 3–4 h | 20–30 min | ∼24 h |
| Main function | Stimulates and regulates spermatogenesis in men and follicular maturation in women | Stimulates steroidogenesis in testicular Leydig cells in men and promotes ovulation in ovarian luteal cells in women | Promotes implantation and placentation, and production of progesterone during pregnancy, stimulates sexual differentiation of the male fetus |
| Receptor | FSHR | LH/CGR | LH/CGR |
| Gene | |||
| Specific β-subunit coding gene | |||
| Chromosomal localisation | 11p13 | 19q13.32 | 19q13.32 |
| Gene length | 4262 bp | 1111 bp | 1467 bp |
| Major site of expression | Anterior lobe of pituitary gland | Anterior lobe of pituitary gland | Syncytiotrophoblastic cells in placenta |
| Alternative splice forms | Yes | No | No |
Fig. 1Schematic representation of the genomic context of the FSHB and the LHB/CGB genes (±100 kb). The figure was drawn based on Ensembl database (http://www.ensembl.org/; Release 54). Boxes denote the genes and triangles above or below them point to the direction of transcription. The black boxes and arrowheads indicate CGB, white LHB and grey neighbouring genes. The CGB genes of rhesus macaque (Macaca mulatta) and common marmoset (Callithrix jacchus) are indicated as CGB A–C, since their ancestral status relative to the human CGB genes is unknown (reviewed in Henke and Gromoll, 2008; Hallast and Laan, 2009).
Fig. 2Density of polymorphisms in the human FSHB and LHB/CGB genes. The graph was drawn based on the resequencing data obtained from Hallast et al. (2005) and Grigorova et al. (2007). Bars represent the number of DNA variants calculated per 1000 bp of the re-sequenced region. The length of the analysed region for LHB, CGB, CGB2 and CGB1 genes is 1.5 kb, CGB5 and CGB8 1.6 kb, CGB7 2.2 kb and for FSHB 2.9 kb. The density fraction of common variants (minor allele frequency, MAF >10%) and rare variants (MAF <10%) is shown by the height of black and grey bars, respectively. Each gene, except for CGB8, was analysed in three populations: Est – Estonians (n = 47), Han – Chinese Han (n = 25), Man – African Mandenkalu (n = 23). CGB8 has been studied only in Estonian samples (n = 95; Rull et al., 2008a,b).
Fig. 3Distribution of known DNA variants across the human FSHB and LHB/CGB genes. The intron/exon structure of full genic regions is drawn to scale; for FSHB only the re-sequenced region is shown. Black, white and grey boxes represent exons, introns and untranslated regions, respectively. Vertical lines mark the positions of detected polymorphisms (Grigorova et al., 2007; Rull et al., 2008a,b; Hallast et al., 2005; Tables 2–4). Non-synonymous mutations causing clinical consequences (from Table 2) are indicated with underlined font and polymorphisms associated with a distinct phenotype (from Table 3) are marked with a star above the positions. S - singleton polymorphism detected for only one individual.
Mutations in the human gonadotropin beta-subunit genes with a clinical phenotype.
| Nucleotide substitution | Amino acid change | Male phenotype | Female phenotype | Bioactivity/effect at protein level | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2600T>G exon 3 | Cys51Gly | Primary amenorrhea, infertility, retarded sexual development (one case) | Aberrant tertiary structure of the protein, loss of bioactivity | ||
| 2631TG>del exon 3 | Val61Δ2bp/87X | Azoospermia, hypogonadism, very low FSH (one case) | Primary amenorrhea, infertility, retarded sexual development (two cases) | Loss of bioactivity, truncated protein | |
| 2677C>A exon 3 | Tyr76X | Azoospermia, hypogonadism, mild gynecomastia (one case) | Primary amenorrhea, partial breast development (two cases) | Loss of bioactivity, truncated protein | |
| 2684G>del exon 3 | Ala79Δ1bp/108X | Primary amenorrhea, impaired pubertal development (one case) | Loss of bioactivity, truncated protein | ||
| 2693T>C exon 3 | Cys82Arg | Azoospermia, hypogonadism, very low FSH (one case) | Aberrant tertiary structure of the protein, loss of bioactivity | ||
| 528G>A exon 2 | Gly36Asp | Impaired spermatogenesis, hypoplastic Leydig cells (one case) | Absent | ||
| 545G>C intron 2 | Azoospermia, hypogonadism (two males | Secondary amenorrhea, infertility (one female | Absent, abnormal splicing of mRNA | ||
| 818A>G exon 3 | Gln54Arg | Absence of spontaneous puberty, low testosterone level (one case) | Absent, no binding to receptor | ||
Nucleotide positions are defined relative to the transcription start site on the genomic DNA sequence; GenBank references: NC_000011.8 for FSHB, NC_000019.8 for LHB/CGB/CGB5/CGB8/CGB7 (Supplementary Figure S1).
Amino acid positions are defined based on the sequence of a mature protein.
Consanguineous siblings.
Fig. 4Schematic description of gene conversion and definition of haplotype variants. (A) During gene conversion the genetic material is transferred between highly identical gene copies or alleles. One locus acts as a donor of a gene conversion tract and the other as an acceptor. In case the two gene copies differ in some sequence positions within the converted tract, the variant specific to the acceptor is replaced by copying the donor-specific variant. The donor DNA sequence remains unchanged. In the figure, the donor locus is displayed as a black line with circles indicating the gene-specific positions. The acceptor locus is drawn as a grey dashed line and the gene-specific positions as triangles. (B) Definition of gene haplotypes using the two major FSHB gene variants as an example (Grigorova et al., 2007). Haplotypes are drawn schematically and the average frequency across European Estonians, Chinese Han and African Mandenkalu is given in brackets. The allelic composition of the two FSHB gene variants differs in every polymorphic position shown as black circles. The alternative alleles of the FSHB common polymorphisms are shown for haplotype 1 and haplotype 2. The locations of the polymorphisms within the FSHB gene are indicated. Rs-numbers correspond to NCBI human genome build 36 (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/).
Fig. 5Haplotype networks for the human CGB5, LHB and FSHB genes. The networks were derived based on resequencing data (Hallast et al., 2005; Grigorova et al., 2007) and using the Median-Joining network algorithm implemented in NETWORK 4.201 software (http://www.fluxus-technology.com). Singleton polymorphisms were excluded from the analysis. Each node represents a single combination of SNP alleles within a gene. The size of a node is proportional to the haplotype frequency in the total dataset and the length of a line connecting two nodes correlates with the number of sequence differences between two haplotypes. The frequency of prevalent haplotypes across studied populations is given next to the major nodes.
Variants in the human gonadotropin beta-subunit genes associated with phenotypic traits.
| Nucleotide substitution | Amino acid change | Assessed phenotype | Number of carriers/total number of studied individuals | Association | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Variants in | |||||
| −211G>T 5′upstream | Azoospermia, FSH deficiency | One male patient with normal virilization | na | ||
| Serum FSH concentration | 131/554 cohort of young men | Yes – minor allele carriers had lower FSH level | |||
| 283/1029 male partners of infertile couples | |||||
| 2623T>C exon 3 | Tyr58Tyr | Polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) | 89/135 female patients | Yes | |
| 54/105 normal control females | |||||
| Variants in | |||||
| 443T>C/465T>C exon 2 | Trp8Arg/Ile15Thr (v-LH) | PCOS | 32/153 female patients | No | |
| 31/212 healthy females | |||||
| PCOS | 1/30 female patients | No | |||
| 5/30 healthy females | |||||
| PCOS | 46/328 female patients | No | |||
| 169/881 control females | |||||
| Subfertility/infertility | 3/3 female patients | na | |||
| 0/2 fertile females | |||||
| Infertility | 16/97 female patients | Yes | |||
| 14/169 fertile females | |||||
| Infertility | 12/145 male patients | No | |||
| 15/200 fertile males | |||||
| Delayed tempo of pubertal progression | 13/49 healthy boys | Yes - v-LH carriers had smaller testicular volume, slower growth rate | |||
| Endocrine disorder and/or gynecologic disease | 45/245 female patients | Yes | |||
| 13/153 fertile females | |||||
| Menstrual disorders | 21/176 female patients | No | |||
| 20/200 normally ovulating females | |||||
| Endometriosis | 16/85 female patients | No | |||
| 29/145 females with unknown fertility | |||||
| Male eunucoid syndrome | One fertile male patient | na | |||
| Non-obstructive male infertility | 12/95 male patients | No | |||
| 29/200 fertile males | |||||
| 961G>A exon 3 | Gly102Ser | Infertility, endometriosis, PCOS | 2/52 female patients | No | |
| 0/212 healthy females | |||||
| Menstrual disorders | 7/176 female patients | Yes | |||
| 0/200 normally ovulating females | |||||
| Infertility | 5/145 male patients | Yes | |||
| 0/200 fertile males | |||||
| Variants in | |||||
| −155G>C/−147G>del/ | Recurrent miscarriage (RM) | 26–27/184 RM couples | Yes | ||
| −144T>C/−142T>A 5′upstream | 45–48/195 fertile females | ||||
| 1038C>T intron 2 | RM | 30/184 RM couples | Yes | ||
| 51/195 fertile females | |||||
| 1178G>C exon 3 | Val56Leu | RM | 1/184 RM couples | na | |
| 0/195 fertile females | |||||
| Variants in | |||||
| 806C>T exon 2 | Arg8Trp | RM | 1/184 RM couples | na | |
| 0/195 fertile females | |||||
| 1045C>T intron 2 | RM | 1/184 RM couples | Yes | ||
| 7/195 fertile females | |||||
| 1237C>G exon 3 | Pro73Arg | RM | 1/184 RM couples | na | |
| 0/195 fertile females | |||||
Nucleotide positions are defined according to the location of the transcription start site in the genomic DNA sequence; GenBank references: NC_000011.8 for FSHB, NC_000019.8 for LHB/CGB/CGB5/CGB8/CGB7 (Supplementary material, Figure S1).
Amino acid positions are defined based on the sequence of a mature protein.
Originally described as 1502G>A; na – statistical tests were not applicable.
Non-synonymous amino acid substitutions with unknown phenotypic consequence.
| Gene | Position relative to mRNA | Position relative to ATG | Amino acid change | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 946G>T | Ser2Ile | |||
| 406G>A | 397 | Met-6Ile | ||
| 413G>A | 404 | Ala–3Thr | ||
| 450A>G | 441 | His10Arg | ||
| 1363A>C | 998 | Asp117Ala | ||
| 794G>A | 429 | Arg6Gln | ||
| 1247G>A | Val79Met | |||
| 1362A>C | 997 | Asp117Ala | ||
| 869G>A | Val29Ile | |||
| 782G>A | 417 | Arg2Lys | ||
| 787/788AT>CC | 422/423 | Met4Pro | ||
| 1162G>A | 797 | Ala51Thr | ||
| 1232C>T | 867 | Arg74Cys | ||
| 1363C>A | 997 | Ala117Asp | ||
Nucleotide positions are defined according to the location of the transcription start site in the genomic DNA sequence; GenBank references: NC_000011.8 for FSHB, NC_000019.8 for LHB/CGB/CGB5/CGB8/CGB7 (Supplementary material, Figure S1).
Translation start site as in original reports; GenBank references: NC_000011.8 for FSHB, NC_000019.8 for LHB/CGB/CGB5/CGB8/CGB7 (Supplementary material, Figure S1).
Amino acid positions are defined based on the sequence of a mature protein.
Fig. 6Normal ranges of (A) serum FSH and LH concentrations in men and women; (B) serum HCG dynamics during pregnancy and (C) levels of HCG beta mRNA transcripts in placental tissue. The graphs (A) and (B) are drawn based on reference values of United Laboratory of University of Tartu Clinics, Estonia. The graph C was drawn based on the data from Rull et al. (2008a,b). The boxes represent the 25th and 75th percentile and median is denoted as the line that bisects the boxes.