Author:
Picard Jean-Yves,Josso Nathalie
Abstract
Male sex differentiation is driven by two hormones, testosterone and anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH), responsible for regression of Müllerian ducts in male fetuses. Mutations inactivating AMH or AMH receptor type 2 (AMHR2) are responsible for persistent Müllerian duct syndrome (PMDS) in otherwise normally virilised 46,XY males. This review is based on published cases, including 157 personal ones. PMDS can present in one of three ways: bilateral cryptorchidism, unilateral cryptorchidism with contralateral hernia and transverse testicular ectopia. Abnormalities of male excretory ducts are frequent. Testicular malignant degeneration occurs in 33% of adults with PMDS. Cancer of Müllerian derivatives is less frequent. Fertility is rare but possible if at least one testis is scrotal and its excretory ducts are intact. Up to January 2019, 81 families with 65 different mutations of the AMH gene, mostly in exons 1, 2 and 5, have been identified. AMHR2 gene mutations comprising 64 different alleles have been discovered in 79 families. The most common mutation, a 27-bp deletion in the kinase domain, was found in 30 patients of mostly Northern European origin. In 12% of cases, no mutation of AMH or AMHR2 has been detected, suggesting a disruption of other pathways involved in Müllerian regression.
Subject
Developmental Biology,Endocrinology,Genetics,Molecular Biology,Animal Science and Zoology,Reproductive Medicine,Biotechnology
Cited by
29 articles.
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