Abstract

BackgroundEndometriosis is a complex disease affecting 10–15% of women at reproductive age. Very few genes are known to be altered in this pathology. RIP140 protein is an important cofactor of oestrogen receptor and many other nuclear receptors. Targeting disruption experiments of nrip1 gene in mice have demonstrated that nuclear receptor interacting protein 1 gene (nrip1), the gene encoding for rip140 protein, is essential for female fertility. Specifically, mice null for nrip1 gene are viable, but females are infertile because of complete failure of mature follicles to release oocytes at ovulation stage. The ovarian phenotype observed in mice devoid of rip140 closely resembles the luteinized unruptured follicle (LUF) syndrome that is observed in a high proportion of women affected of endometriosis or idiopathic infertility. Here we present a preliminary work that analyses the role of NRIP1 gene in humans.MethodsWe have sequenced the complete coding region of NRIP1 gene in 20 unrelated patients affected by endometriosis. We have performed genetic association studies by using the DNA variants identified during the sequencing process.ResultsWe identified six DNA variants within the coding sequence of NRIP1 gene, and five of them generated amino acid changes in the protein. We observed that three of twenty sequenced patients have specific combinations of amino-acid variants within the RIP140 protein that are poorly represented in the control population (p = 0.006). Moreover, we found that Arg448Gly, a common polymorphism located within NRIP1 gene, is associated with endometriosis in a case-control study (59 cases and 141 controls, pallele positivity test = 0.027).ConclusionOur results suggest that NRIP1 gene variants, separately or in combinations, might act as predisposing factors for human endometriosis.

Highlights

  • Endometriosis is a complex disease affecting 10–15% of women at reproductive age

  • Targeting disruption experiments of this function in mice have demonstrated that nuclear receptor interacting protein 1 gene (GenBank NM_173440), the gene encoding for rip140 protein, is essential for female fertility [3]

  • The ovarian phenotype observed in mice devoid of rip140 closely resembles the luteinized unruptured follicle (LUF) syndrome that is observed in a high proportion of women affected by endometriosis or idiopathic infertility [2,3]

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Summary

Introduction

Endometriosis is a complex disease affecting 10–15% of women at reproductive age. Very few genes are known to be altered in this pathology. The ovarian phenotype observed in mice devoid of rip140 closely resembles the luteinized unruptured follicle (LUF) syndrome that is observed in a high proportion of women affected of endometriosis or idiopathic infertility. The ovarian phenotype observed in mice devoid of rip140 closely resembles the LUF syndrome that is observed in a high proportion of women affected by endometriosis or idiopathic infertility [2,3]. Embryo transfer and ovarian transplantation experiments in nrip knock-out mice indicate slightly longer pregnancies in nrip1-/- mice and a high rate of foetal and neonatal losses of pups from mothers with nrip1-/ - ovaries [6] These data suggest that rip140 protein may have two functions in mice ovaries: i) an essential role in ovulation; ii) a secondary role in the maintenance of pregnancy [3,6]. A role for nrip gene in fat accumulation has been proposed [6]

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