| Literature DB >> 34750818 |
Umut Altunoglu1,2, Esra Börklü1, Anju Shukla3, Nathalie Escande-Beillard1,4, Susanne Ledig5, Hülya Azaklı1, Shalini S Nayak3, Serpil Eraslan1, Katta Mohan Girisha3, Ingo Kennerknecht5, Hülya Kayserili1,2.
Abstract
Homozygous variants in PPP2R3C have been reported to cause a syndromic 46,XY complete gonadal dysgenesis phenotype with extragonadal manifestations (GDRM, MIM# 618419) in patients from four unrelated families, whereas heterozygous variants have been linked to reduced fertility with teratozoospermia (SPGF36, MIM# 618420) in male carriers. We present eight patients from four unrelated families of Turkish and Indian descent with three different germline homozygous PPP2R3C variants including a novel in-frame duplication (c.639_647dupTTTCTACTC, p.Ser216_Tyr218dup). All patients exhibit recognizable facial dysmorphisms allowing gestalt diagnosis. In two 46,XX patients with hypergonadotropic hypogonadism and nonvisualized gonads, primary amenorrhea along with absence of secondary sexual characteristics and/or unique facial gestalt led to the diagnosis. 46,XY affected individuals displayed a spectrum of external genital phenotypes from ambiguous genitalia to complete female. We expand the spectrum of syndromic PPP2R3C-related XY gonadal dysgenesis to both XY and XX gonadal dysgenesis. Our findings supported neither ocular nor muscular involvement as major criteria of the syndrome. We also did not encounter infertility problems in the carriers. Since both XX and XY individuals were affected, we hypothesize that PPP2R3C is essential in the early signaling cascades controlling sex determination in humans.Entities:
Keywords: PPP2R3C; XX gonadal dysgenesis; XY gonadal dysgenesis; disorders of sexual development; facial dysmorphism
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34750818 DOI: 10.1111/cge.14086
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Genet ISSN: 0009-9163 Impact factor: 4.438