PROP1 mutations are a prevalent cause of congenital CPHD with OPP, and therefore, PROP1 sequencing must be the first step of molecular investigation in patients with CPHD and OPP, especially in populations with a high frequency of PROP1 mutations. In the absence of mutations, massively parallel sequencing is a promising approach. The high prevalence and diversity of PROP1 mutations is associated with the ethnic background of this cohort.
Central adrenal insufficiency (CAI) is a life-threatening disorder. This occurs when ACTH production is insufficient, leading to low cortisol levels. Since corticosteroids are crucial to many metabolic responses under organic stress and inflammatory conditions, CAI recognition and prompt treatment are vital. However, the diagnosis of CAI is challenging. This is not only because its clinical presentation is usually oligosymptomatic, but also because the CAI laboratory investigation presents many pitfalls. Thus, the clarification of when to use each test could be helpful in many contexts. The CAI challenge is also involved in treatment: Several formulations of synthetic steroids exist, followed by the lack of a biomarker for glucocorticoid replacement. This review aims to access all available literature to synthesize important topics about who should investigate CAI, when it should be suspected, and how CAI must be treated.
Background: Growth hormone deficiency (GHD) occurs in ~ 1/8000 individuals, and 14% of the patients have mutations in five major candidate genes. However, over 30 genes have been implicated in hypopituitarism. WES (Whole Exome Sequencing) is a promising approach for molecular diagnosis of patients with GHD because it offers the opportunity to screen for all known genes in addition to novel disease gene discovery. Methods: WES was performed for 13 unrelated patients with congenital hypopituitarism born from consanguineous parents. The variants were filtered assuming autosomal recessive inheritance, rare variants in population databases, in silico analysis predicted as deleterious and pituitary and/or hypothalamus gene expression. To determine whether variants in CDH2 that were predicted to be deleterious were functionally significant, L1 fibroblast lines that have no endogenous CDH2 protein were stably transfected with either human wild type or variant CDH2, the transfected cells were labelled with lipophilic dyes, and cell adhesion properties were assessed. Results: Homozygous pathogenic or likely pathogenic allelic variants were found in 2 of the 13 patients. First, a female patient with GH, TSH, ACTH and LH/ FSH deficiencies presenting ectopic posterior pituitary lobe, non-visualized stalk, and hypoplastic anterior pituitary lobe had two homozygous rare variants predicted as deleterious: PLA2G4A p.Asn703Lys and CDH2 c.865G>A (p.Val289Ile). Only CDH2 is known to be expressed in the pituitary, and Pla2g4a null mice have a pleiotropic phenotype without obvious hypopituitarism. The CDH2 variant is rare and classified as deleterious. Sanger sequencing of CDH2 in four family members of the affected proband revealed that the unaffected parents and two unaffected siblings were heterozygous carriers. The effect of the CDH2 variant on cell aggregation was assessed in cell culture. Large cell aggregates formed in cells transfected with wild type CDH2, but cell aggregates were small or absent in cells that were either non-transfected or transfected with the CDH2 variant. Second, a patient with isolated GHD and no MRI abnormalities was identified with a rare, likely deleterious, homozygous GH1 c.171delT (p. Phe 57Leufs*43) variant. He had a sister who died at the age of 5 and had features of GHD. Conclusion: In a cohort of congenital hypopituitarism from consanguineous parents we had 15% molecular diagnosis using WES. We identified a variant in a known gene, GH1 c.171delT and a variant in a novel gene, CDH2 p.Val289I.
Dedico meu doutorado Aos meus pais Antônio de Pádua e Cláudia, Aos meus irmãos Mariana e Gustavo, À minha afilhada Ana Clara, Ao meu esposo Ismael, E à minha filha Manuela, v "Sonhe com aquilo que você quer ser, Porque você possui apenas uma vida E nela só se tem uma chance De fazer aquilo que quer. Tenha felicidade bastante para fazê-la doce. Dificuldades para fazê-la forte. Tristeza para fazê-la humana. E esperança suficiente para fazê-la feliz. As pessoas mais felizes não têm as melhores coisas. Elas sabem fazer o melhor das oportunidades Que aparecem em seus caminhos. A felicidade aparece para aqueles que choram. Para aqueles que se machucam Para aqueles que buscam e tentam sempre. E para aqueles que reconhecem A importância das pessoas que passaram pela sua vida."
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