4.7 Article Proceedings Paper

Mutational analysis of steroidogenic factor 1 (NR5a1) in 24 boys with bilateral anorchia:: a French collaborative study

Journal

HUMAN REPRODUCTION
Volume 22, Issue 12, Pages 3255-3261

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/humrep/dem278

Keywords

SF1; gonadal dysgenesis; vanishing testis syndrome; testicular regression; disorders of sexual development

Funding

  1. Wellcome Trust [079666] Funding Source: Medline

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BACKGROUND: Steroidogenic factor 1 (SF1/AdBP4/FTZF1, NR5A1) is a nuclear receptor transcription factor that plays a key role in regulating adrenal and gonadal development, steroidogenesis and reproduction. Recently, haploin-sufficiency of SF1 has been described in several 46,XY individuals with mild gonadal dysgenesis and impaired androgenization, but normal adrenal function, suggesting that dosage-sensitive or domain-specific effects of SF1 action are important in human testicular development and function. Our objective was to investigate whether partial defects in SF1 function might be associated with milder male reproductive phenotypes, such as bilateral anorchia ('vanishing testis syndrome') and micropenis. METHODS: This study involved mutational analysis of NR5A1 in 24 individuals with bilateral anorchia and micropenis from the French Collaborative Anorchia study, as well as in vitro functional studies of SF1-dependent transcriptional activation and computer modeling. RESULTS: A novel heterozygous missense mutation (V355M) in SF1 was found in one boy with a micropenis and testicular regression syndrome. This non-synonymous change was found to affect a highly conserved amino acid within helix 7 of the ligand-binding domain of SF1. This V355M mutation did not affect stability or nuclear localization, but did result in an similar to 50% reduction in SF1 activity in several different assay systems. CONCLUSIONS: In conclusion, heterozygous partial loss of function mutations in SF1 may be associated with bilateral anorchia ('vanishing testis syndrome') and micropenis in humans.

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