Abstract

Emerging evidence from murine studies suggests that mammalian sex determination is the outcome of an imbalance between mutually antagonistic male and female regulatory networks that canalize development down one pathway while actively repressing the other. However, in contrast to testis formation, the gene regulatory pathways governing mammalian ovary development have remained elusive. We performed exome or Sanger sequencing on 79 46,XX SRY-negative individuals with either unexplained virilization or with testicular/ovotesticular disorders/differences of sex development (TDSD/OTDSD). We identified heterozygous frameshift mutations in NR2F2, encoding COUP-TF2, in three children. One carried a c.103_109delGGCGCCC (p.Gly35Argfs∗75) mutation, while two others carried a c.97_103delCCGCCCG (p.Pro33Alafs∗77) mutation. In two of three children the mutation was de novo. All three children presented with congenital heart disease (CHD), one child with congenital diaphragmatic hernia (CDH), and two children with blepharophimosis-ptosis-epicanthus inversus syndrome (BPES). The three children had androgen production, virilization of external genitalia, and biochemical or histological evidence of testicular tissue. We demonstrate a highly significant association between the NR2F2 loss-of-function mutations and this syndromic form of DSD (p = 2.44 × 10−8). We show that COUP-TF2 is highly abundant in a FOXL2-negative stromal cell population of the fetal human ovary. In contrast to the mouse, these data establish COUP-TF2 as a human “pro-ovary” and “anti-testis” sex-determining factor in female gonads. Furthermore, the data presented here provide additional evidence of the emerging importance of nuclear receptors in establishing human ovarian identity and indicate that nuclear receptors may have divergent functions in mouse and human biology.

Highlights

  • Emerging evidence from murine studies suggests that mammalian sex determination is the outcome of an imbalance between mutually antagonistic male and female regulatory networks that canalize development down one pathway while actively repressing the other

  • Many individuals with TDSD and a minority with OTDSD have a translocation of the testis-determining SRY gene, usually onto one of the X chromosomes, whereas a small proportion have chromosomal rearrangements associated with upregulation of SOX gene expression.[5,6]

  • Very rare heterozygous or homozygous mutations in WNT4 (MIM: 603490) cause Mullerian aplasia/hyperandrogenism (MIM: 158330)[8] or testis development (SERKAL syndrome [MIM: 611812]) in 46,XX individuals, respectively, whereas homozygous RSPO1 (MIM: 609595) mutations are associated with testis formation and skin phenotypes in 46,XX children (MIM: 610644).[7]

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Summary

REPOR T

Loss of Function of the Nuclear Receptor NR2F2, Encoding COUP-TF2, Causes Testis Development and Cardiac Defects in 46,XX Children. The genomic analysis of 46,XX individuals with testes (sometimes known as testicular disorders/differences of sex development [TDSD]; [MIM: 400045]) or ovotestes (ovotesticular DSD [OTDSD]) supports the hypothesis that ‘‘pro-testis/anti-ovary’’ or ‘‘pro-ovary/anti-testis’’ genetic pathways exist.[4,5,6] These children typically present with virilized genitalia due to testosterone production from the presence of testicular tissue. Potentially pathogenic mutations were not identified in any other genes known to be involved in DSD and high-resolution array comparative genomic hybridization (aCGH) did not indicate rearrangements involving DSD-associated genes These frameshift mutations are absent from the public variant databases and they were detected only in the three individuals in the cohort who had cardiac anomalies together with 46,XX DSD. VSD at birth; spontaneous closure of VSD at 9 years of age External genitalia male, hyperpigmented; phallus 3 cm with no hypospadias; gonads not palpable ‘‘ambiguous’’ with phallus-like clitoris, pigmented scrotum; gonads not palpable ‘‘ambiguous’’ Prader IV, pigmented scrotum, phallus-like clitoris; R, palpable gonad in the inguinal canal

Internal genitalia uterus not identified by US uterus present
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