| Literature DB >> 21682876 |
Eeva-Maria Laitinen1, Kirsi Vaaralahti, Johanna Tommiska, Elina Eklund, Mari Tervaniemi, Leena Valanne, Taneli Raivio.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Kallmann syndrome (KS), comprised of congenital hypogonadotropic hypogonadism (HH) and anosmia, is a clinically and genetically heterogeneous disorder. Its exact incidence is currently unknown, and a mutation in one of the identified KS genes has only been found in ~30% of the patients.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21682876 PMCID: PMC3143089 DOI: 10.1186/1750-1172-6-41
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
Clinical and molecular genetic features of the probands with Kallmann Syndrome.
| 1 | F | No | c.246_247delAG* | p.E84GfsX26 | No# | A | Absent | A missing tooth | |||
| 11 | F | KS, nHH | c.142G > A | p.G48S | No | A | NA | None | |||
| 45 | F | Infertility | c.961_962delAA | p.K321RfsX13 | No | A | Absent l.dx, small l.sin | None | |||
| 503 | F | KS | c.1305_1306dupAT | p.S436YfsX3 | No | A | Absent | None | |||
| 54 | F | KS | c.1825C > T | p.R609X | No | A | Absent | Cleft lip, two missing teeth, scoliosis | |||
| 13 | M | No | c.626G > A | p.R209H | Yes | No | No | A | NA | None | |
| 14 | M | KS | c.961_962delAA | p.K321RfsX13 | NA | No | Partial§ | A | Rudimentary | None | |
| 20 | M | nHH¤ | c.2009A > C | p.E670A | Yes | No | No | A | NA | Cleft lip and palate | |
| 50 | M | KS, nHH | c.11G > A | p.W4X | NA | No | No | NA | NA | None | |
| 2 | M | KS | g.2357_2360delAgta | Yes | Bilat | No | A | NA | Synkinesia, a missing tooth | ||
| 4 | M | KS | c.784C > T | p.R262X | Yes | Bilat | No | A | NA | Synkinesia, left renal agenesis, rheumatoid arthritis | |
| 9 | M | KS | c.471_472delCT | p.S158WfsX45 | NA | R | No | A | NA | Synkinesia, unilateral conductive hearing loss | |
*de novo -mutation; #Testicular volume less than 4 mL in males or no spontaneous thelarche in females; §Testicular volume 6 mL at the age of 33; ¤A brother with normosmic HH, cleft lip and palate, and limb anomalies.
SIT, The Smell Identification Test; OB, olfactory bulbs; F, female; M, male; nHH, normosmic HH; R, right; A, anosmia; NA, not assessed
FGFR1 MIM# 136350; RefSeq NM_023110.2, gi:105990521
KAL1 MIM# 308700; RefSeq NM_000216.2, gi:119395745
Figure 1Pedigrees of KS patients carrying an . Pedigrees #11, #503, #45, #54, and #50 are consistent with autosomal dominant form of inheritance. X-chromosomal recessive inheritance is apparent in pedigrees #2 and #9.
Figure 2Functional analyses of FGFR1 mutants. A. Endoglycosidase analysis of mutant FGFR1s. COS-1 cells were transiently transfected with myc-tagged WT or mutated FGFR1 cDNA. EV= empty vector. Cell lysates were subjected to PNGase (PNG, upper panel) or EndoHf (EH, lower panel) digestion. The overall expression of the G48S, R209H and E670A was not significantly decreased as compared to WT (PNGase-treated bands). Receptor maturation patterns are shown in lower panel. The G48S, R209H and E670A mutants have a similar maturation pattern as WT receptor. B. Cell-surface expression of FGFR1 mutants. COS-1 cells were transiently transfected with myc-tagged WT or mutated FGFR1 cDNA. EV = empty vector. Cell-surface expression levels were determined from fixed cells using an anti-myc primary antibody. Absorbancies were detected at 450 nm. The values on the Y-axis represent fold inductions as compared to the level elicited by EV. The WT, G48S, R209H and E670A have similar cell-surface expression levels. C. MAPK signaling analysis of FGFR1 mutants. L6 myoblasts were transiently transfected with myc-tagged WT or mutated FGFR1 cDNA and treated with FGF2 for 0/2/10/30 min. Phospho-specific antibodies (phospho-p44/42 MAPK) were used to determine phosphorylation of MAPK. To control for equal loading, blots were reprobed using an anti p44/42 MAPK antibody. WT and R209H show clear phosphorylation of MAPK after 10 and 30 minutes of FGF2 treatment. With the mutant receptors G48S and E670A, no clear phosphorylation of MAPK was seen in any of the indicated time points. For comparison of baseline activities, all untreated samples (0 min) were also run on the same gel.
Figure 3The axial 3D T2-weighted MRI images from the region of the inner ear of (A) a KS patient with normal semicircular canals (asterisk), and (B) a KS patient with hypoplastic semicircular canals (arrow), and an unspecified atrophic area (arrow head) in his retina (C).
Figure 4Schematic of the . SP, signal peptide; D1-D3, immunoglobulin-like domains; TM, transmembrane domain; JM, juxtamembrane domain; TK1-2, tyrosine kinase domain (contains two subdomains). The G48S mutation is located in the first immunoglobulin-like domain (D1), involved in the receptor autoinhibition. The R209H mutation is located in D2, responsible for ligand binding and specificity. The E670A mutation lies within TK2, responsible for activating the MAP (mitogen-activated protein) kinase pathway. The nonsense mutations, W4X and R609X, and the frameshift mutations (E84GfsX26, K321RfsX13, S436YfsX3), all lead to premature stop codons.