Chromosomal microdeletion leading to pituitary gigantism through hormone-gene overexpression

Author:

Katoh-Fukui Yuko1,Hattori Atsushi1,Zhang Ruogu1,Terao Miho2,Takada Shuji2,Nakabayashi Kazuhiko3,Hata Kenichiro3,Yamada Yutaka4,Matsuura Nobuo56,Fukami Maki1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Molecular Endocrinology, National Research Institute for Child Health and Development (Kokuritsu Kenkyu Kaihatsu Hojin Kokuritsu Seiiku Iryo Kenkyu Center Kenkyujo) , Tokyo 157-8535 , Japan

2. Department of Systems BioMedicine, National Research Institute for Child Health and Development (Kokuritsu Kenkyu Kaihatsu Hojin Kokuritsu Seiiku Iryo Kenkyu Center Kenkyujo) , Tokyo 157-8535 , Japan

3. Department of Maternal–Fetal Biology, National Research Institute for Child Health and Development (Kokuritsu Kenkyu Kaihatsu Hojin Kokuritsu Seiiku Iryo Kenkyu Center Kenkyujo) , Tokyo 157-8535 , Japan

4. Department of Pediatrics, Hakodate Central General Hospital , Hakodate 040-8585 , Japan

5. Department of Reproductive and Developmental Medicine , Graduate School of Medicine, , Sapporo 060-0808 , Japan

6. Hokkaido University School of Medicine , Graduate School of Medicine, , Sapporo 060-0808 , Japan

Abstract

Abstract Pituitary gigantism is a rare endocrinopathy characterized by tall stature due to growth hormone (GH) hypersecretion. This condition is generally linked to a genetic predisposition to tumors that produce GH or GH-releasing hormone (GHRH). Here, we report a Japanese woman who exhibited prominent body growth from infancy to reach an adult height of 197.4 cm (+7.4 standard deviation). Her blood GH levels were markedly elevated. She carried no pathogenic variants in known growth-controlling genes but had a hitherto unreported 752 kb heterozygous deletion at 20q11.23. The microdeletion was located 8.9 kb upstream of GHRH and encompassed exons 2–9 of a ubiquitously expressed gene TTI1 together with 12 other genes, pseudogenes and non-coding RNAs. Transcript analyses of the patient’s leukocytes showed that the microdeletion produced chimeric mRNAs consisting of exon 1 of TTI1 and all coding exons of GHRH. In silico analysis detected promoter-associated genomic features around TTI1 exon 1. Genome-edited mice carrying the same microdeletion recapitulated accelerated body growth from a few weeks after birth. The mutant mice developed pituitary hyperplasia and exhibited ectopic Ghrh expression in all tissues examined. Thus, the extreme phenotype of pituitary gigantism in the patient likely reflects GHRH overexpression driven by an acquired promoter. The results of this study indicate that germline submicroscopic deletions have the potential to cause conspicuous developmental abnormalities due to gene overexpression. Furthermore, this study provides evidence that constitutive expression of a hormone-encoding gene can result in congenital disease.

Funder

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

National Center for Child Health and Development

Takeda Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Genetics,Molecular Biology,General Medicine

Reference35 articles.

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