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Somatic KCNJ5 mutation occurring early in adrenal development may cause a novel form of juvenile primary aldosteronism.

Authors :
Tamura, Ai
Nishimoto, Koshiro
Seki, Tsugio
Matsuzawa, Yoko
Saito, Jun
Omura, Masao
Gomez-Sanchez, Celso E.
Makita, Kohzoh
Matsui, Seishi
Moriya, Nobukazu
Inoue, Atsushi
Nagata, Maki
Sasano, Hironobu
Nakamura, Yasuhiro
Yamazaki, Yuto
Kabe, Yasuaki
Mukai, Kuniaki
Kosaka, Takeo
Oya, Mototsugu
Suematsu, Sachiko
Source :
Molecular & Cellular Endocrinology. Feb2017, Vol. 441, p134-139. 6p.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

We report a case of non-familial juvenile primary aldosteronism (PA). Super-selective adrenal venous sampling identified less aldosterone production in the right inferior adrenal segment than others. Bilateral adrenalectomy sparing the segment normalized blood pressure and improved PA. Both adrenals had similar histologies, consisting of a normal adrenal cortex and aldosterone synthase-positive hyperplasia/adenoma. An aldosterone-driving KCNJ5 mutation was detected in the lesions, but not in the histologically normal cortex. After taking into account that the two adrenal glands displayed a similar histological profile, as well as the fact that hyperplastic lesions in both glands exhibited a common KCNJ5 mutation, we conclude that the specific mutation may have occurred at an adrenal precursor mesodermal cell, at an early stage of development; its daughter cells were mixed with non-mutant cells and dispersed into both adrenal glands, resulting into a form of the condition known as genetic mosaicism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03037207
Volume :
441
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Molecular & Cellular Endocrinology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
120635267
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mce.2016.07.031