| Literature DB >> 28707430 |
Qing-Hua Guo1,2, Cheng-Zhi Wang1, Zhi-Qiang Wu3, Yan Qin4, Bai-Yu Han1,5, An-Ping Wang1, Bao-An Wang1, Jing-Tao Dou1, Xiao-Sheng Wu6,7, Yi-Ming Mu1.
Abstract
Pituitary stalk interruption syndrome (PSIS) is a rare type of hypopituitarism manifesting various degrees of pituitary hormone deficiency. Although mutations have been identified in some familial cases, the underpinning mechanisms of sporadic patients with PSIS who are in a vast majority remain elusive, necessitating a comprehensive study using systemic approaches. We postulate that other genetic mechanisms may be responsible for the sporadic PSIS. To test this hypothesis, we conducted a study in 24 patients with PSIS of Han Chinese with no family history using whole-exome sequencing (WES) and bioinformatic analysis. We identified a group of heterozygous mutations in 92% (22 of 24) of the patients, and these genes are mostly associated with Notch, Shh, Wnt signalling pathways. Importantly, 83% (20 of 24) of the patients had more than one mutation in those pathways suggesting synergy of compound mutations underpin the pathogenesis of sporadic PSIS.Entities:
Keywords: bioinformatics; pathogenesis; pathway; pituitary stalk interruption syndrome; whole-exome sequencing
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28707430 PMCID: PMC5706574 DOI: 10.1111/jcmm.13272
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cell Mol Med ISSN: 1582-1838 Impact factor: 5.310
Demographics and clinical features of patients with PSIS included in this study
| Baseline | ( |
| Age (year) | 25.0 (11.0–35.0) |
| Sex (male/female) | 22/2 |
| Familial history | 0 |
| Height (SDS) | −2.8 (−5.0 to −0.2) |
| Bone age (SDS) | −1.3 (−5.0 to 0.5) |
| Upper/lower segment ratio | 0.9 (0.9–1.0) |
| Height to arm span ratio | 1.0 (0.9–1.0) |
| Breech presentation (%) | 45.8 |
| Perinatal events (%) | 37.5 |
| GHD (%) | 100 |
| GHD+ACTH deficiency (%) | 70.8 |
| GHD+TSH deficiency (%) | 54.1 |
| GHD+LH/FSH deficiency (%) | 70.8 |
| GHD+ Hyperprolactinaemia (%) | 12.5 |
GH deficiency(GHD) was confirmed when the peak GH values were less than 5 ng/ml (complete GH deficiency) and 10 ng/ml (partial GH deficiency), respectively, in pyridostigmine bromide test and insulin‐induced hypoglycaemia tolerance test (ITT). TSH deficiency was diagnosed if basal serum free T4 (FT4) was subnormal (<10.42 pmol/l) with an inappropriately low serum TSH concentration (<5.50 mU/l). ACTH deficiency was diagnosed by morning basal serum cortisol <198.7 nmol/l with no significant increase during hypoglycaemia. LH/FSH deficiency was diagnosed based on delayed or absent pubertal development with low serum levels of testosterone for males (<8.4 nmol/l) or oestradiol for females (<48.2 pmol/l) and blunted LH/FSH response to a GnRH stimulation test. Hyperprolactinaemia were defined as basal serum PRL higher than 17.7 μg/l for males and 29.2 μg/l for females, respectively.
SDS: standard deviation scores; GHD: growth hormone deficiency; ACTH: adrenal corticotropic hormone; TSH: thyroid‐stimulating hormone; LH: luteinizing hormone; FSH: follicle‐stimulating hormone.
Figure 4GEO profile value of NCOR2, NKD2, ZIC2 and MAML3 in humans.
Figure 1The sagittal and coronal pituitary on MRI. Left panel: The sagittal image showing the ectopic pituitary located at the floor of the third ventricle, along with a small anterior pituitary gland. Right panel: The coronal image showing the absence of pituitary stalk.
Figure 2Gene categories in three pathways corresponding to each patient applied to WES. From left to right, mutations for each case were presented, and two of the participants did not show any mutations in the target pathways, thus only 22 cased were included. Red: WNT/β‐catenin signalling pathway; Blue: Notch signalling pathway; Yellow: Sonic hedgehog signalling pathway.
Figure 3The location and their relations to conserved functional domains of mutations identified in this study. Different types of mutants were labelled as such.