4.4 Article

Testicular dysgenesis/regression without campomelic dysplasia in patients carrying missense mutations and upstream deletion of SOX9

Journal

MOLECULAR GENETICS & GENOMIC MEDICINE
Volume 3, Issue 6, Pages 550-557

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/mgg3.165

Keywords

Campomelic dysplasia; deletion; enhancer; mutation; testis

Funding

  1. Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology
  2. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science
  3. Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare
  4. National Center for Child Health and Development
  5. Takeda Foundation
  6. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [22132002, 26870887, 15K19538, 15K19439, 26293224] Funding Source: KAKEN

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SOX9 haploinsufficiency underlies campomelic dysplasia (CD) with or without testicular dysgenesis. Current understanding of the phenotypic variability and mutation spectrum of SOX9 abnormalities remains fragmentary. Here, we report three patients with hitherto unreported SOX9 abnormalities. These patients were identified through molecular analysis of 33 patients with 46,XY disorders of sex development (DSD). Patients 1-3 manifested testicular dysgenesis or regression without CD. Patients 1 and 2 carried probable damaging mutations p.Arg394Gly and p.Arg437Cys, respectively, in the SOX9 C-terminal domain but not in other known 46, XY DSD causative genes. These substitutions were absent from similar to 120,000 alleles in the exome database. These mutations retained normal transactivating activity for the Col2a1 enhancer, but showed impaired activity for the Amh promoter. Patient 3 harbored a maternally inherited similar to 491 kb SOX9 upstream deletion that encompassed the known 32.5 kb XY sex reversal region. Breakpoints of the deletion resided within nonrepeat sequences and were accompanied by a short-nucleotide insertion. The results imply that testicular dysgenesis and regression without skeletal dysplasia may be rare manifestations of SOX9 abnormalities. Furthermore, our data broaden pathogenic SOX9 abnormalities to include C-terminal missense substitutions which lead to target-gene-specific protein dysfunction, and enhancer-containing upstream microdeletions mediated by nonhomologous end-joining.

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