| Literature DB >> 32620954 |
Erica E Davis1,2,3, Ravikumar Balasubramanian4,5, Zachary A Kupchinsky1, David L Keefe4, Lacey Plummer4, Kamal Khan2,3, Blazej Meczekalski6, Karen E Heath7, Vanesa Lopez-Gonzalez8, Mary J Ballesta-Martinez8, Gomathi Margabanthu9, Susan Price10, James Greening11, Raja Brauner12, Irene Valenzuela13,14, Ivon Cusco13,14, Paula Fernandez-Alvarez13,14, Margaret E Wierman15, Taibo Li16,17,18, Kasper Lage5,16,17, Priscila Sales Barroso19, Yee-Ming Chan20, William F Crowley5,21, Nicholas Katsanis1,2,3.
Abstract
Dysfunction of the gonadotropin-releasing hormone (GnRH) axis causes a range of reproductive phenotypes resulting from defects in the specification, migration and/or function of GnRH neurons. To identify additional molecular components of this system, we initiated a systematic genetic interrogation of families with isolated GnRH deficiency (IGD). Here, we report 13 families (12 autosomal dominant and one autosomal recessive) with an anosmic form of IGD (Kallmann syndrome) with loss-of-function mutations in TCF12, a locus also known to cause syndromic and non-syndromic craniosynostosis. We show that loss of tcf12 in zebrafish larvae perturbs GnRH neuronal patterning with concomitant attenuation of the orthologous expression of tcf3a/b, encoding a binding partner of TCF12, and stub1, a gene that is both mutated in other syndromic forms of IGD and maps to a TCF12 affinity network. Finally, we report that restored STUB1 mRNA rescues loss of tcf12 in vivo. Our data extend the mutational landscape of IGD, highlight the genetic links between craniofacial patterning and GnRH dysfunction and begin to assemble the functional network that regulates the development of the GnRH axis.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32620954 PMCID: PMC7608740 DOI: 10.1093/hmg/ddaa120
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Mol Genet ISSN: 0964-6906 Impact factor: 6.150