| Literature DB >> 33256838 |
Takashi Nagai1, Kentaro Mizuno2, Masayuki Usami3, Hidenori Nishio4, Taiki Kato1, Akihiro Nakane5, Daisuke Matsumoto1, Satoshi Kurokawa1, Hideyuki Kamisawa1, Tetsuji Maruyama6, Takahiro Yasui1, Yutaro Hayashi4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Transverse testicular ectopia (TTE) is a rare anomaly in which both testes descend through a single inguinal canal into the same hemiscrotum. Although almost 20-50% of patients with TTE exhibit persistent Müllerian duct syndrome (PMDS) and many genetic analyses have been performed, no reports have described the genes contributing to TTE without PMDS. Here, we report two cases of TTE without PMDS using immunohistochemical staining and genetic analysis. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Anti-Müllerian hormone; Persistent Müllerian duct syndrome; Transverse testicular ectopia
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33256838 PMCID: PMC7706043 DOI: 10.1186/s13256-020-02559-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Case Rep ISSN: 1752-1947
Fig. 1Appearance of external genitalia and MRI findings in cases 1 and 2. Dotted circles indicate palpable testes
Patients’ characteristics at surgery
| Case no. | Age (months) | Laterality | Other anomalies | Karyotype | LH (mIU/mL) | FSH (mIU/mL) | Testosterone (ng/mL) | AMH (pmol/L | Treatment |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 15 | Left | Hypospadias | 46,XY | < 0.1 | 2.5 | < 0.03 | 850 | Laparoscopic orchiopexy |
| 2 | 25 | Right | None | 46,XY | 0.6 | 0.1 | < 0.03 | 1842 | Transseptal orchiopexy |
Fig. 2Immunohistochemical staining of testicular tissues from the two cases. In case 2, testicular biopsy of the unaffected side was performed after obtaining approval from the patient’s parents. Notably, c-kit and UTF1 were positive in spermatogonia and spermatocytes in all samples, whereas PLAP was negative. H-E: hematoxylin-eosin, c-kid, PLAP: placental alkaline phosphatase, UTF1: undifferentiated embryonic cell transcription factor 1. Scale bar: 30 μm
Genetic variants in AMH, AMHR2, INSL3, and RXFP2
| Gene symbol | Case 1 | Case 2 | Mutation type |
|---|---|---|---|
| g.365G>T | Missense (Ser49Ile) | ||
| g.1357G>A | – | ||
| g.1416G>A | – | ||
| – | g.5096C>T | – | |
| g.4983G>A | g.4983G>A | Intronic | |
| g.4727C>T | – | ||
| g.21848A>T | g.21848A>T | Intronic | |
| g.25883T>C | g.25883T>C | Intronic | |
| g.26523_26524insA | g.26523_26524insA | Intronic | |
| g.35339A>G | g.35339A>G | Intronic | |
| g.42015_42016insC | g.42015_42016insC | Intronic | |
| g.42610C>T | g.42610C>T | Intronic | |
| g.46869A>G | g.46869A>G | Silent (c.963A>G) | |
| g.57973T>C | g.57973T>C | Intronic | |
| g.63040A>G | g.63040A>G | Intronic |
Fig. 3Partial chromatograms the AMH gene variant in cases 1 and 2. The base change g.365G > T led to the missense variant in exon 1
Fig. 4Three-dimensional prediction of AMH protein by SWISS-MODEL. Protein models of AMH 49Ser a and AMH 49Ile b are shown. The change in loop structure is shown (arrow)