Journal
MECHANISMS OF AGEING AND DEVELOPMENT
Volume 125, Issue 10-11, Pages 683-695Publisher
ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.mad.2004.08.007
Keywords
androgen insensitivity syndrome; androgen receptor; androgen; androgen receptor gene mutation; transcription; male sexual development
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Funding
- FIC NIH HHS [D43 TW/HD 00627] Funding Source: Medline
- NICHD NIH HHS [HD 16910, T32 HD 075315, U54 HD 35041, HD 04466] Funding Source: Medline
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Partial androgen insensitivity with sex phenotype variation in two unrelated families was associated with missense mutations in the androgen receptor (AR) gene that disrupted the AR NH2-terminaVcarboxy terminal interaction. Each mutation caused a single amino acid change within the region of the ligand-binding domain that forms activation function 2 (AF2). In one family, the mutation 1737T was in alpha helix 4 and in the other F725L was between helices 3 and 4. Neither mutation altered androgen binding as determined by assays of mutant AR in the patient's cultured genital skin fibroblasts or of recombinant mutant receptors transfected into COS cells. In transient cotransfection assays in CV I cells, transactivation with the AR mutants at low concentrations of DHT was reduced several fold compared with wild-type AR but increased at higher concentrations. Defects in NH2-terminal/carboxy terminal interactions were identified in mammalian two hybrid assays. In similar assays, there was reduced binding of the p 160 coactivators TIF2/SRC2 and SRC I to the mutant AR ligand binding domains (LBD). In the family with AR 1737T, sex phenotype varied from severely defective masculinization in the proband to a materual great uncle whose only manifestation of AIS was severe gynecomastia. He was fertile and passed the mutation to two daughters. The proband of the F725L family was also incompletely masculinized but was raised as a male while his half-sibling by a different father was affected more severely and reared as a female. These studies indicate that the function of an AR AF2 mutant in male development can vary greatly depending on the genetic background. (C) 2004 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.
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