Abstract

PurposeMutation frequencies of PROP1, POU1F1 and HESX1 in patients with combined pituitary hormone deficiencies (CPHD) vary substantially between populations. They are low in sporadic CPHD patients in Western Europe. However, most clinicians still routinely send DNA of their CPHD patients for genetic screening of these pituitary transcription factors. Before we can recommend against screening of PROP1, POU1F1 and HESX1 as part of routine work-up for Western-European sporadic CPHD patients, it is crucial to rule out possible defects in regulatory regions of these genes, which could also disturb the complex process of pituitary organogenesis.MethodsThe regulatory regions of PROP1, POU1F1 and HESX1 are not covered by Whole Exome Sequencing as they are largely located outside the coding regions. Therefore, we manually sequenced the regulatory regions, previously defined in the literature, of PROP1, POU1F1 and HESX1 among 88 Dutch patients with CPHD. We studied promoter SNPs in relation to phenotypic data.ResultsWe found six known SNPs in the PROP1 promoter. In the POU1F1 promoter, we found one new variant and two known SNPs. We did not find any variant in the HESX1 promoter.ConclusionAlthough the new POU1F1 variant might explain the phenotype of one patient, the general conclusion of this study is that variants in regulatory regions of PROP1, POU1F1 and HESX1 are rare in patients with sporadic CPHD in the Netherlands. We recommend that genetic screening of these pituitary transcription factors should no longer be part of routine work-up for Western-European, and especially Dutch, sporadic CPHD patients.

Highlights

  • Pituitary hormones are crucial for correct human growth and development

  • We studied the regulatory regions of the pituitary transcription factors PROP1, POU1F1 and HESX1 in a cohort of 88 combined pituitary hormone deficiencies (CPHD) patients, in order to find an explanation for their phenotype

  • Since patients with HESX1 mutations can initially present with Isolated GH Deficiency (IGHD) only, we screened 92 patients with severe or partial IGHD (64 M/28 F)

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Summary

Introduction

The anterior part of the pituitary (‘master gland’) is the central regulator of peripheral hormones. It contains somatotrope, lactotrope, gonadotrope, thyrotrope and corticotrope cells producing GH, PRL, LH/FSH, TSH and ACTH, respectively. Regulation of the expression of pituitary transcription factors is crucial for normal pituitary development. Hesx and Prop exhibit temporally distinct but overlapping patterns of expression over the entire period of pituitary development. They heterodimerize on the same sequence element and Hesx suppresses Prop expression (and vice versa). Premature expression of Prop can entirely block pituitary organogenesis [2]

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