We report on molecular and clinical findings in 10 Japanese patients (four males and six females) from eight families (two pairs of siblings and six isolated cases) with Antley-Bixler syndrome accompanied by abnormal genitalia and/or impaired steroidogenesis. Direct sequencing was performed for all the 15 exons of cytochrome P450 oxidoreductase gene (POR), showing two missense mutations (R457H and Y578C), a 24-bp deletion mutation resulting in loss of nine amino acids and creation of one amino acid (L612_W620delinsR), a single bp insertion mutation leading to frameshift (I444fsX449), and a silent mutation (G5G). R457H has previously been shown to be a pathologic mutation, and computerized modeling analyses indicated that the 15A>G for G5G could disturb an exonic splicing enhancer motif, and the remaining three mutations should affect protein conformations. Six patients were compound heterozygotes, and three patients were R457H homozygotes; no mutation was identified on one allele of the remaining one patient. Clinical findings included various degrees of skeletal features, such as brachycephaly, radiohumeral synostosis, and digital joint contractures in patients of both sexes, normal-to-poor masculinization during fetal and pubertal periods in male patients, virilization during fetal life and poor pubertal development without worsening of virilization in female patients, and relatively large height gain and delayed bone age from the pubertal period in patients of both sexes, together with maternal virilization during pregnancy. Blood cholesterol was grossly normal, and endocrine studies revealed defective CYP17A1 and CYP21A2 activities. The results suggest that Antley-Bixler syndrome with abnormal genitalia and/or impaired steroidogenesis is caused by POR mutations, and that clinical features are variable and primarily explained by impaired activities of POR-dependent CYP51A1, CYP17A1, CYP21A2, and CYP19A1.
BackgroundThe human SLC25A13 gene encodes citrin, the liver-type mitochondrial aspartate/glutamate carrier isoform 2 (AGC2), and SLC25A13 mutations cause citrin deficiency (CD), a disease entity that encompasses different age-dependant clinical phenotypes such as Adult-onset Citrullinemia Type II (CTLN2) and Neonatal Intrahepatic Cholestasis caused by Citrin Deficiency (NICCD). The analyses of SLC25A13 gene and its protein/mRNA products remain reliable tools for the definitive diagnoses of CD patients, and so far, the SLC25A13 mutation spectrum in Chinese CD patients has not been well-characterized yet.Methods and ResultsBy means of direct DNA sequencing, cDNA cloning and SNP analyses, 16 novel pathogenic mutations, including 9 missense, 4 nonsense, 1 splice-site, 1 deletion and 1 large transposal insertion IVS4ins6kb (GenBank accession number KF425758), were identified in CTLN2 or NICCD patients from China, Japan and Malaysia, respectively, making the SLC25A13 variations worldwide reach the total number of 81. A large NICCD cohort of 116 Chinese cases was also established, and the 4 high-frequency mutations contributed a much larger proportion of the mutated alleles in the patients from south China than in those from the north (χ2 = 14.93, P<0.01), with the latitude of 30°N as the geographic dividing line in mainland China.ConclusionsThis paper further enriched the SLC25A13 variation spectrum worldwide, and formed a substantial contribution to the in-depth understanding of the genotypic feature of Chinese CD patients.
Abstract.Congenital hyperinsulinism is a rare condition, and following recent advances in
diagnosis and treatment, it was considered necessary to formulate evidence-based clinical
practice guidelines reflecting the most recent progress, to guide the practice of
neonatologists, pediatric endocrinologists, general pediatricians, and pediatric surgeons.
These guidelines cover a range of aspects, including general features of congenital
hyperinsulinism, diagnostic criteria and tools for diagnosis, first- and second-line
medical treatment, criteria for and details of surgical treatment, and future
perspectives. These guidelines were generated as a collaborative effort between The
Japanese Society for Pediatric Endocrinology and The Japanese Society of Pediatric
Surgeons, and followed the official procedures of guideline generation to identify
important clinical questions, perform a systematic literature review (April 2016), assess
the evidence level of each paper, formulate the guidelines, and obtain public
comments.
This study demonstrated the characteristic association of HLA-class II and class I genes with Type 1A diabetes among Japanese children. A TDT did not reveal the genomic imprinting of HLA-class II and class I genes in Type 1A diabetes.
This study provides novel mechanisms leading to gain of function of CYP19A1. Furthermore, it appears that clinical severity of AEXS is primarily determined by the tissue expression pattern of relevant genes and by the structural property of promoter-associated exons of chimeric mRNA.
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