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Growth Hormone Receptor (GHR) 6Ω Pseudoexon Activation: A Novel Cause of Severe Growth Hormone Insensitivity

Authors :
Martin O. Savage
Donatella Capalbo
Vivian Hwa
Helen L Storr
Avinaash Maharaj
Sumana Chatterjee
Mariacarolina Salerno
Katharina Schilbach
Stefania Palumbo
Claudio Pignata
Emanuele Miraglia del Giudice
Louise A. Metherell
Grazia Cirillo
Emily Cottrell
Anna Grandone
Jack Williams
Martin Bidlingmaier
Adalgisa Festa
Cottrell, Emily
Maharaj, Avinaash
Williams, Jack
Chatterjee, Sumana
Cirillo, Grazia
Miraglia Del Giudice, Emanuele
Festa, Adalgisa
Palumbo, Stefania
Capalbo, Donatella
Salerno, Mariacarolina
Pignata, Claudio
Savage, Martin O
Schilbach, Katharina
Bidlingmaier, Martin
Hwa, Vivian
Metherell, Louise A
Grandone, Anna
Storr, Helen L
Source :
The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
The Endocrine Society, 2021.

Abstract

Context Severe forms of growth hormone insensitivity (GHI) are characterized by extreme short stature, dysmorphism, and metabolic anomalies. Objective This work aims to identify the genetic cause of growth failure in 3 “classical” GHI individuals. Methods A novel intronic growth hormone receptor gene (GHR) variant was identified, and in vitro splicing assays confirmed aberrant splicing. A 6Ω pseudoexon GHR vector and patient fibroblast analysis assessed the consequences of the novel pseudoexon inclusion and the impact on GHR function. Results We identified a novel homozygous intronic GHR variant (g.5:42700940T > G, c.618+836T > G), 44 bp downstream of the previously recognized intronic 6Ψ GHR pseudoexon mutation in the index patient. Two siblings also harbored the novel intronic 6Ω pseudoexon GHR variant in compound heterozygosity with the known GHR c.181C > T (R43X) mutation. In vitro splicing analysis confirmed inclusion of a 151-bp mutant 6Ω pseudoexon not identified in wild-type constructs. Inclusion of the 6Ω pseudoexon causes a frameshift resulting in a nonfunctional truncated GHR lacking the transmembrane and intracellular domains. The truncated 6Ω pseudoexon protein demonstrated extracellular accumulation and diminished activation of STAT5B signaling following GH stimulation. Conclusion Novel GHR 6Ω pseudoexon inclusion results in loss of GHR function consistent with a severe GHI phenotype. This represents a novel mechanism of Laron syndrome and is the first deep intronic variant identified causing severe postnatal growth failure. The 2 kindreds originate from the same town in Campania, Southern Italy, implying common ancestry. Our findings highlight the importance of studying variation in deep intronic regions as a cause of monogenic disorders.

Details

ISSN :
19457197 and 0021972X
Volume :
107
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ca28cc245b817064c336640fe8813232