| Literature DB >> 32765423 |
Nikolina Zdraveska1, Mirjana Kocova1, Adeline K Nicholas2, Violeta Anastasovska1, Nadia Schoenmakers2.
Abstract
Neonatal screening in Macedonia detects congenital hypothyroidism (CH) with an incidence of 1 in 1,585, and more than 50% of cases exhibit a normally located gland-in-situ (GIS). Monogenic mutations causing dyshormonogenesis may underlie GIS CH; additionally, a small proportion of thyroid hypoplasia has a monogenic cause, such as TSHR and PAX8 defects. The genetic architecture of Macedonian CH cases has not previously been studied. We recruited screening-detected, non-syndromic GIS CH or thyroid hypoplasia cases (n = 40) exhibiting a spectrum of biochemical thyroid dysfunction ranging from severe permanent to mild transient CH and including 11 familial cases. Cases were born at term, with birth weight >3,000 g, and thyroid morphologies included goiter (n = 11), thyroid hypoplasia (n = 6), and apparently normal-sized thyroid. A comprehensive, phenotype-driven, Sanger sequencing approach was used to identify genetic mutations underlying CH, by sequentially screening known dyshormonogenesis-associated genes and TSHR in GIS cases and TSHR and PAX8 in cases with thyroid hypoplasia. Potentially pathogenic variants were identified in 14 cases, of which four were definitively causative; we also detected digenic variants in three cases. Seventeen variants (nine novel) were identified in TPO (n = 4), TG (n = 3), TSHR (n = 4), DUOX2 (n = 4), and PAX8 (n = 2). No mutations were detected in DUOXA2, NIS, IYD, and SLC26A7. The relatively low mutation frequency suggests that factors other than recognized monogenic causes (oligogenic variants, environmental factors, or novel genes) may contribute to GIS CH in this region. Future non-hypothesis-driven, next-generation sequencing studies are required to confirm these findings.Entities:
Keywords: congenital hypothyroidism; dyshormonogenesis; genes; goiter; iodine; screening; thyroid hypoplasia
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32765423 PMCID: PMC7381236 DOI: 10.3389/fendo.2020.00413
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) ISSN: 1664-2392 Impact factor: 5.555
Figure 1Strategy by which Sanger sequencing was used to screen individual genes most likely to be implicated in the pathogenesis of CH in particular phenotypic subgroups. Genes in gray boxes denote the genes sequenced in each subgroup. SLC5A5 (NIS) was sequenced only in cases lacking pertechnetate scan data; otherwise, normal isotope uptake was assumed to indicate preserved NIS function. TSH values represent the median and (minimum-maximum) range; cases with TSH >75 mU/L were said to have TSH 75 mU/L for the purposes of these calculations. Cases harboring possible pathogenic genetic variants are listed for each CH category. All mutations were heterozygous or compound heterozygous. IH, isolated hyperthyrotropinemia; GIS, normal-sized, normally located gland-in-situ. Case 79 was presumed to have permanent CH based on levothyroxine dose requirements and the presence of goiter. Cases in whom CH was not reevaluated refer to those in whom a trial of levothyroxine withdrawal was not undertaken.
Genetic variants in mutation-positive cases.
| 44 | 14.1 | ND | c.4637A>G | p.E1546G | Het | 0.0014 | PD | D | DC | LP | ||
| 49 | 50 | Negative | c.1516G>A | p.E506K (M) | Het | 1.5 × 10−5 | PD | D | DC | VUS | ||
| p.G94S (M) | Compoundhet | — | PD | D | DC | VUS | ||||||
| c.2895_2898 delGTTC | p.F966Sfs | 0.012 | PD | D | DC | P | ||||||
| 74 | 16.5 | Negative | c.724delC | p.R242Gfs | Het | — | NA | NA | DC | P | ||
| 79 | 159 | ND | c.31_50dup20 | p.E17Dfs | Compound het | 3 × 10−5 | NA | NA | DC | P | ||
| c.1313G>A | p.R438H (M) | — | PD | D | DC | LP | ||||||
| 27 | >75 | — | ||||||||||
| 28 | >75 | — | ||||||||||
| 33 | 13.8 | Negative | c.692 + 1_692 + 4delGTGA (splice donor) | NA (M) | Het | — | NA | NA | DC | VUS | ||
| c.886C>T | p.R296 | Het | 0.0008 | NA | NA | DC | P | |||||
| 51 | 57.7 | Negative | c.4093A>T | p.N1365Y | Het | 0.0002 | PD | D | DC | VUS | ||
| 71 | 14.1 | ND | c.5372delT | p.L1791Cfs | Het | — | NA | NA | DC | P | ||
| c.2395G>C | p.E799Q (M) | Het | — | PD | D | DC | VUS | |||||
| 90 | 13.8 | ND | c.321A>C | p.E107D (M) | Het | — | PD | T | DC | VUS | ||
| 97 | 66.3 | Negative | c.1355T>C | p.L452P (F) | Het | 1.5 × 10−5 | PD | D | DC | VUS | ||
| 99 | 21 | Negative | c.4318G>A | p.D1440N (M) | Het | 3.0 × 10−5 | PD | D | DC | VUS | ||
Zyg, zygosity; max. MAF, maximal minor allele frequency in the ExAC database (European non-Finnish population in all cases); TSH, venous TSH at diagnosis; (M) maternally inherited; (F) paternally inherited; B, benign; PD, probably damaging; DC, disease causing; T, tolerated; P, pathogenic; LP, likely pathogenic; VUS, variant of uncertain significance; bold, siblings; ACMG, American College of Medical Genetics classification; MT, MutationTaster; PP-2, PolyPhen-2.
novel variant; Tr, Transient CH; IH, Isolated hyperthyrotropinemia; Per, Permanent CH; NR, CH not reevaluated for permanency; ND, not done; GIS, normal-sized; normally located gland-in-situ. Gray: variants in oligogenic cases that are possibly contributing to CH, in addition to variants which are more likely to be causative.
Figure 2Graphic description of the TSHR donor splice site variant in case 33. [] means deleted bases; bold font indicates splice site after deletion.
Summary of mutation-positive and mutation-negative cases.
| Number of cases | 14 | 26 |
| Ethnicity of cases | 11 Macedonian, 3 Albanian | 17 Macedonian, 7 Albanian, 2 Roma |
| % of cohort | 35 | 65 |
| Familial cases | 4 | 7 |
| Median TSH (mU/L) and range | 26.2 (13.8–159) | 35.7 (13.7–152) |
| % cases with TSH ≥ 50 mU/L | 43 | 31 |
| % with goiter | 29 | 27 |
| % with normal-sized gland | 71 | 50 |
| % with hypoplastic gland | 0 | 23 |
| Genes harboring variants |
There was no significant difference in median TSH values (Mann–Whitney test p = 0.63) or proportion of cases with TSH ≥50 mU/L (χ.