| Literature DB >> 22909003 |
Joyce Y Wu1, Ivan N McGown, Lin Lin, John C Achermann, Mark Harris, David M Cowley, Salim Aftimos, Kristen A Neville, Catherine S Choong, Andrew M Cotterill.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: NR5A1 loss-of-function mutations are increasingly found to be the cause of 46,XY disorders of sex development (DSD).Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 22909003 PMCID: PMC3613751 DOI: 10.1111/cen.12012
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Endocrinol (Oxf) ISSN: 0300-0664 Impact factor: 3.478
Fig. 1The c.74A>G alteration in this patient causes a tyrosine to cysteine change at codon 25 (p.Y25C). This amino acid is highly conserved and affects a codon located within the first zinc finger DNA-binding domain (DBD).
Hormone results at two periods shortly after birth
| 13 days old | 1 month + 18 days old | |
|---|---|---|
| Testosterone (n | 10·8↑ (RI 3·1–10) | 25 ↑(RI 1·8–16·6) |
| Dihydrotestosterone (n | 4·2↑ (RI 0·17–2·1) | 5·3 ↑ (RI 0·4–2·9) |
| LH (IU/l) | 7·9↑ (RI 2·7–7·8) | 1·2 (RI 0·12–4·8) |
| FSH (IU/l) | 3·9↑ (RI 1·7–3·5) | 1·6 (RI 0·6–5·5) |
RI, Reference Interval.
Fig. 2(a) Assays showing activation of a Cyp11a1 promoter by wild-type (WT) SF-1 and impaired transcriptional activity by the p.Y25C mutant. Relative luciferase activity was measured and expressed as fold activation above baseline (empty vector). Results are shown as the mean ± sem of three independent experiments, each performed in triplicate. (−), empty vector; WT, wild-type; p.G35E, a known loss-of-function mutation. (b) Immunocytochemistry to show cellular localization of SF-1 linked to GFP. Wild-type (WT) SF-1 shows strong nuclear localization, whereas the p.Y25C mutant GFP-SF-1 construct shows partially impaired nuclear localization in a proportion of cells.