Genetic variants of estrogen beta and leptin receptors may cause gynecomastia in adolescent

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Abstract

Objective: Gynecomastia is a benign breast enlargement in males that affects approximately one-third of adolescents. The exact mechanism is not fully understood; however, it has been proposed that estrogen receptors and aromatase enzyme activity may play important roles in the pathogenesis of gynecomastia. While many studies have reported that aromatase enzyme (CYP19) gene polymorphism is associated with gynecomastia, only one study has shown a relationship between estrogen receptor (ER) alpha and beta gene polymorphism and gynecomastia. Thus, the aim of this study was to evaluate the relationships between CYP19 (rs2414096), ER alpha (rs2234693), ER beta (rs4986938), leptin (rs7799039), and leptin receptor (rs1137101) gene polymorphisms and gynecomastia. Methods: This study included 107 male adolescents with gynecomastia and 97 controls. Total serum testosterone (T) and estradiol (E2) levels were measured, and DNA was extracted from whole blood using the PCR-RFLP technique. The polymorphic distributions of CYP19, ER alpha, ER beta, leptin and leptin receptor genes were compared. Results: The median E2 level was 12.41 (5.00-65.40) pg/ml in the control group and 16.86 (2.58-78.47) pg/ml in the study group (p.

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Eren, E., Edgunlu, T., Korkmaz, H. A., Cakir, E. D. P., Demir, K., Cetin, E. S., & Celik, S. K. (2014). Genetic variants of estrogen beta and leptin receptors may cause gynecomastia in adolescent. Gene, 541(2), 101–106. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gene.2014.03.013

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