z-logo
open-access-imgOpen Access
GH1 C.291 + 34G>C in a Growth Hormone Deficient Pedigree
Author(s) -
Katherine Vidal,
Allison Britt,
Anu Anna George,
Joseph W. Ray,
Phillip Lee
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
journal of the endocrine society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.046
H-Index - 20
ISSN - 2472-1972
DOI - 10.1210/jendso/bvab048.1138
Subject(s) - endocrinology , medicine , proband , prolactin , ighd , tall stature , short stature , growth hormone , compound heterozygosity , growth hormone deficiency , hormone , mutation , biology , genetics , gene
Background: Heterozygous loss of function mutations in GH1 are a cause of autosomal dominant isolated growth hormone deficiency (GHD) or IGHD type II. However, this condition is rare and a genotype/phenotype association is often based on single case or pedigree reports. Clinical Case: The male proband was born at 38 weeks following an uncomplicated pregnancy, birthweight 2585 gm (˗1.3SD), length 43 cm (˗2.7SD). At 20 months old: length ˗3.2SD, weight/length 16%. Peak growth hormone (GH) levels 4.42 ng/mL and 3.2 ng/mL following clonidine and arginine stimulation, respectively; cortrosyn-stimulated cortisol was 41.4 mcg/dL. Prolactin was 61.2 ng/mL (reference range 2.6 to 13.1 ng/mL); T4 and TSH levels were normal. Magnetic resonance imaging showed a flattened anterior pituitary gland, consistent with empty sella, with normal bright spot. He has had an intermittent and variable response to GH treatment due to noncompliance; recent recorded height was ˗3.6SD at 13.9 and he was early pubertal. Father had a history of childhood growth hormone treatment and is 151 cm tall, 2 paternal aunts did not receive treatment and are 145 cm tall, 3 children of these aunts are diagnosed with GHD. There is no maternal family history of GHD; mother is 155 cm. Proband testing revealed heterozygous GH1 c.291 + 34G>C (EGL Genetics), classified as a variant of unknown significance; father was also found to have this variant, mother was negative. Genetic testing for of additional family members is under consideration. Conclusion: Nine of 96 heterozygous GH1 variants are located in intron 3. Two have been classified as pathogenic and are predicted to cause exon skipping. Our proband’s variant cannot be considered a canonical splice site or in a mutational hot spot but has extremely low frequency in population databases. Functional studies clan clarify if our proband’s variant results in a 17.5 kDa GH isoform and dominant negative effect on full length GH production with potential detrimental effects on other anterior pituitary hormones. We present the second GHD pedigree with GH1 c.291 + 34G>C mutation. As in the previous report (1), no other hormone deficiencies are identified, despite the appearance of an empty sella for our proband. Reference: (1) Cho SY, Ki, CS, Park, HD, et al. Genetic investigation of patients with undetectable peaks of growth hormone after two provocation tests. Clin Endocrinol 2013; 78: 317-20.

The content you want is available to Zendy users.

Already have an account? Click here to sign in.
Having issues? You can contact us here
Accelerating Research

Address

John Eccles House
Robert Robinson Avenue,
Oxford Science Park, Oxford
OX4 4GP, United Kingdom