| Literature DB >> 26416826 |
Nadia Schoenmakers1, Kyriaki S Alatzoglou2, V Krishna Chatterjee2, Mehul T Dattani2.
Abstract
Central congenital hypothyroidism (CCH) may occur in isolation, or more frequently in combination with additional pituitary hormone deficits with or without associated extrapituitary abnormalities. Although uncommon, it may be more prevalent than previously thought, affecting up to 1:16 000 neonates in the Netherlands. Since TSH is not elevated, CCH will evade diagnosis in primary, TSH-based, CH screening programs and delayed detection may result in neurodevelopmental delay due to untreated neonatal hypothyroidism. Alternatively, coexisting growth hormones or ACTH deficiency may pose additional risks, such as life threatening hypoglycaemia. Genetic ascertainment is possible in a minority of cases and reveals mutations in genes controlling the TSH biosynthetic pathway (TSHB, TRHR, IGSF1) in isolated TSH deficiency, or early (HESX1, LHX3, LHX4, SOX3, OTX2) or late (PROP1, POU1F1) pituitary transcription factors in combined hormone deficits. Since TSH cannot be used as an indicator of euthyroidism, adequacy of treatment can be difficult to monitor due to a paucity of alternative biomarkers. This review will summarize the normal physiology of pituitary development and the hypothalamic-pituitary-thyroid axis, then describe known genetic causes of isolated central hypothyroidism and combined pituitary hormone deficits associated with TSH deficiency. Difficulties in diagnosis and management of these conditions will then be discussed.Entities:
Keywords: central hypothyroidism; congenital hypothyroidism; hypopituitarism; thyrotropin releasing hormone
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2015 PMID: 26416826 PMCID: PMC4629398 DOI: 10.1530/JOE-15-0341
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Endocrinol ISSN: 0022-0795 Impact factor: 4.286
Figure 1Schematic representation of the stages of pituitary development in rodents: (a) Oral ectoderm (b) Rudimentary pouch (c) Definitive pouch (d) Adult pituitary gland. The close contact between the developing Rathke's pouch (red) and the infundibulum (yellow) is maintained throughout and is important for the normal morphogenesis of the gland. I, infundibulum; NP, neural plate; N, notochord; PP, pituitary placode; OM, oral membrane; H, heart; F, forebrain; MB, midbrain; HB, hindbrain; RP, Rathke's pouch; AN, anterior neural pore; O, oral cavity; PL, posterior lobe; OC, optic chiasm; P, pontine flexure; PO, pons; IL, intermediate lobe; AL, anterior lobe; DI, diencephalon; SC, sphenoid cartilage. Reprinted from Trends in Genetics, volume 15, Sheng HZ, Westphal H, Early steps in pituitary organogenesis, pages 236–240, Copyright (1999), with permission from Elsevier.
Figure 2Schematic cascade of transcription factors and signaling molecule during pituitary development. Terminal differentiation of the anterior pituitary cell types is the result of complex interactions between extrinsic signalling molecules and transcription factors (HESX1, SOX2, SOX3, OTX2, LHX3, LXH4, GATA2, IS L1, PROP1, POU1F1). Possible pituitary phenotypes arising from mutations at different stages of pituitary development are indicated. SOD, septo-optic dysplasia; CNS, central nervous system; EPP, ectopic posterior pituitary; CPHD, combined pituitary hormone deficiency. Reproduced, with permission, from Kelberman D, Rizzoti K, Lovell-Badge R, Robinson IC, Dattani MT 2009 Genetic regulation of pituitary gland development in human and mouse, Endocrine Reviews 30 790–829. Copyright (2009) The Endocrine Society.
Figure 3Diagramatic representation of the hypothalamic–pituitary–thyroid axis with positive regulation (black) predominantly mediated by thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) and negative (grey) feedback influences, predominantly mediated by thyroid hormone receptor (TR) isoforms β2 and β1. Putative transporter molecules (grey) mediating these effects are annotated. OATP1C1 is expressed in capillaries throughout the brain, monocarboxyate transporter 8 (MCT8) is expressed in the PVN of the hypothalamus and in follicular stellate cells in the anterior pituitary (reviewed in Fliers ). Tissue-specific TR isoform expression is described, for thyroid hormone target tissues.
Endocrine, Neuroradiological and extrapituitary manifestations of mutations in genes implicated in CCH in humans, and in the corresponding knockout mouse model
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| TSHB | AR | TSH | − | E, N | − |
| TRHR | AR | TSH | − | N |
|
| Isolated TSH Deficiency or combined pituitary hormone deficiency | |||||
| IGSF1 | XL | TSH±PRL, GH (transient) | Macroorchidism (males) | N |
|
| Combined pituitary hormone deficiency | |||||
| POU1F1 | AR, AD | GH, TSH, PRL | − | APH |
|
| PROP1 | AR | GH, TSH, LH, FSH, PRL, evolving ACTH deficiencies | − | APH (may be transient), N, E |
|
| Specific Syndrome | |||||
| HESX1 | AR, AD | Panhypopit | Septo-optic dysplasia and its variants | APH, EPP, ACC, ONH |
|
| LHX3 | AR | GH, TSH, LH, FSH, PRL | Limited neck rotation, short cervical spine, sensorineural deafness | APH, N, E |
|
| LHX4 | AD | GH, TSH, ACTH, variable gonadotrophin deficiencies | Cerebellar abnormalities | APH, EPP |
|
| SOX3 | XL | GH,TSH, ACTH, LH, FSH | Variable mental retardation | APH, EPP |
|
| OTX2 | AD | GH, TSH, ACTH, LH, FSH | Uni/Bilat. Anophthalmia | N, APH, EPP |
|
E, Enlarged; N, Normal; APH, Anterior pituitary hypoplasia; EPP, Ectopic posterior pituitary; ACC, Agenesis of corpus callosum; ONH Optic nerve hypoplasia; TSH thyroid-stimulating hormone; LH, luteinizing hormone; FSH, follicle-stimulating hormone; ACTH, Adrenocorticotrophic hormone; Panhypopit.; Panhypopituitarism, AR, Autosomal recessive; AD, Autosomal Dominant; XL, X-linked, −/− homozygous null. References: Rabeler , Zeng . Sun , Camper . Nasonkin , Dattani , Sheng , Sheng , Rizzoti and Acampora
But 1/3 females affected.
Figure 4Model for heterodimeric thyroid stimulating hormone (TSH) bound to the TSH receptor (TSHR) illustrating the position of naturally occurring TSHB loss-of-function mutations associated with congenital central hypothyroidism. The model was generated using PHYRE for predicting TSHbeta subunit (TSHb) structure and was modelled onto FSH-FSHR (1×wd) and the TSHR-K1-70FAB (2×wt) structure using PYMOL. Colour coding is as follows: Green TSHR, Red: TSH alpha subunit (TSHa, aGSU), Blue: TSHb. Specific structural features required to maintain the heterodimeric structure: Cyan ‘seatbelt’ region, Yellow: cysteines conserved throughout cysteine knot proteins and involved in disulphide bridge formation. Spheres denote TSHB mutations: C105R; C108Y; C125Vfs*10 (yellow) disrupt disulphide bridges, G49R (purple) is located in the conserved CAGYC region and E32*; Q69*; F77Sfs*6 (orange) truncate the protein prematurely. The nomenclature of these mutations follows the most recent HGNC guidelines to include the 20 amino acid signal peptide of TSHB, thus may differ from that cited in the original articles. Nomenclature can be converted to that previously published for missense mutations by subtracting 20 eg Q69* new nomenclature=Q49X old nomenclature.
Figure 5Crystallographic modeling of TRHR showing the positions (red spheres) of the two previously described mutations associated with central hypothyroidism: R17X truncating the protein in the extracaellular domain and an in-frame deletion of 3 amino acids (Ser115-Thr117) plus a missense change (Ala118 for Thr118; p.S115-T117del+T118) located at the cytoplasmic end of the third transmembrane domain of the receptor The TRHR structural model was generated by homology modeling using the PHYRE server and Pymol. The N-terminal start codon and C-terminal end codon are highlighted in green.
Figure 6Schematic illustrating the protein domain structure of IGSF1 with the internal signal peptide directing cleavage of the carboxy-terminal domain denoted by a dashed line. Positions of naturally-occurring mutations associated with congenital central hypothyroidism are denoted; all are located within the carboxyterminal domain. Two whole gene deletions (below) have also been reported (Sun , Nakamura , Tajima ).
Figure 7Proposed strategy for genetic testing in cases with CCH. MPHD, multiple pituitary hormone deficiencies; ONH, optic nerve hypoplasia; HPE, holoprosencephaly; HH, hypogonadotrophic hypogonadism; IHGD, isolated human growth hormone deficiency.