Genetic aspects underlying the Normocalcemic and Hypercalcemic phenotypes of Primary Hyperparathyroidism

Author:

Viviani Arianna1,COLANGELO Luciano2ORCID,Ciminelli Bianca Maria1,Novelletto Andrea1,Sonato Chiara3,Occhiuto Marco2,Cipriani Cristiana2,Diacinti Daniele4,De Martino Viviana2,Gianni Walter2,Pepe Jessica5,Minisola Salvatore5,Malaspina Patrizia1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biology, University of Rome Tor Vergata

2. Department of Clinical, Internal, Anesthesiologic and Cardiovascular Sciences, "Sapienza" University of Rome

3. Department of Clinical, Internal, Anesthesiology and Cardiovascular Sciences, "Sapienza" University of Rome

4. Department of Radiological Sciences, Oncology and Pathology, "Sapienza" University of Rome

5. Department of Clinical, Internal, Anesthesiologic and Cardiovascular Sciences

Abstract

Abstract Purpose Hypercalcemic primary hyperparathyroidism (PHPT) is a common endocrine disorder that has been very well characterized. In contrast, many aspects of normocalcemic primary hyperparathyroidism (NPHPT) such as natural history, organ damage, and management are still matter of debate. In addition, both the pathophysiology and molecular basis of NPHPT are unclear. We investigated whether PHPT and NPHPT patient cohorts share the same pattern of genetic variation in genes known to be involved in calcium and/or bone metabolism. Research design and methods : Genotyping for 9 single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) was performed by Real-Time PCR (TaqMan assays) on 27 NPHPT and 31 PHPT patients evaluated in a tertiary referral Center. The data of both groups were compared with 54 in house-controls and 503 subjects from the 1,000 Genomes Project. All groups were compared for allele/haplotype frequencies, on a single locus, two loci and multi-locus basis. Results The NPHPT group differed significantly at SNPs in OPG and ESR1. Also, the NPHPT cohort was peculiar for pairwise associations of genotypes and for the overrepresentation of unusual multilocus genotypes. Conclusions Our NPHPT patient set harboured a definitely larger quota of genetic diversity than the other samples. Specific genotypes may help in defining subgroups of NPHPT patients which deserve ad hoc clinical and follow-up studies.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

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