Author:
Gromoll J,Schulz A,Borta H,Gudermann T,Teerds KJ,Greschniok A,Nieschlag E,Seif FJ
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Human chorionic gonadotropin/luteinizing hormone (hCG/LH) function in the male is mediated by the LH receptor (LHR) and is crucial for the normal development of internal and external genitalia. We report a 46, XY patient who presented at the age of 16 with a female phenotype and delayed puberty. Gonads were located bilaterally in the inguinal canal, removed surgically and showed hypoplastic Leydig cells. Immunostaining for the LHR revealed that some Leydig cell progenitors were positive, while others were negative, reflecting different developmental stages of Leydig cell maturation. METHODS AND RESULTS: Molecular analysis of the LHR was performed on DNA extracted from blood samples of the patient, her parents and sister. The 11 exons of the LHR gene were amplified by PCR and subjected to further single stranded conformation polymorphism (SSCP) analysis. Aberrant migration patterns were observed in exon 7. Upon sequencing, a homozygous T to G transversion was identified, resulting in a F194V substitution located in the extracellular domain. The parents and sister were heterozygous carriers of this mutation. Functional studies in transiently transfected COS-7 cells with the F194V LHR mutation showed the lack of cAMP production upon hCG stimulation, indicating complete inactivation of the receptor due to impaired trafficking of the receptor to the membrane. The mutation is located within a stretch of five amino acids Ala (A)-Phe (F)-Asn (N)-Gly (G)-Thr (T), highly conserved in glycoprotein hormone receptors. For the follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) receptor (FSHR) loss-of-function mutations have been allocated to this region, a homozygous A189V mutation resulting in a resistant ovary syndrome and impaired spermatogenesis and a heterozygous N191I mutation with no apparent phenotype. Further mutational and functional analysis of the AFN region in the LHR and FSHR revealed that the integrity of this amino acid sequence is crucial for receptor function.
Subject
Endocrinology,General Medicine,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism
Cited by
60 articles.
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