Adrenocortical Overexpression of Gastric Inhibitory Polypeptide Receptor Underlies Food-Dependent Cushing’s Syndrome1

  • N’Diaye N
  • Tremblay J
  • Hamet P
  • et al.
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Abstract

Abnormal responsiveness of adrenocortical cells to gastric inhibitory polypeptide (GIP) in food-dependent Cushing’s syndrome suggested that adrenal expression of ectopic, overexpressed, or mutated GIP receptor (GIPR) underlies this syndrome. The expression of GIPR was studied by RT-PCR in human adrenal tissues from two patients with GIP-dependent Cushing’s syndrome (adenoma, bilateral hyperplasia), five fetal or adult controls, one patient with Cushing’s disease, and four patients with non-food-dependent cortisol-secreting adenomas or bilateral hyperplasias and compared to that in normal pancreas. Hybridization of the RT-PCR-amplified ribonucleic acids with the human GIPR complementary DNA showed an overexpression of GIPR in the adrenals of the two GIP-dependent Cushing’s syndrome patients compared to that in normal adrenal tissues (2–3 orders of magnitude) or pancreas (10-fold); no signal could be seen in adrenal adenomas or macronodular hyperplasia from cases of non-food-dependent Cushing’s syndrome. No mutation of the GIPR was identified by sequencing the full-length receptor in GIP-dependent adrenal tissue. New alternative spliced isoforms of the GIPR were found, but are identical in GIP-dependent and normal adrenal tissues. Incubation of adrenal cells with GIP stimulates cortisol secretion in GIP-dependent, but not in normal fetal, adult, or non-food-dependent Cushing’s syndrome, adrenals. We conclude that the GIPR overexpression and its coupling to steroidogenesis underlie GIP-dependent Cushing’s syndrome.

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N’Diaye, N., Tremblay, J., Hamet, P., De Herder, W. W., & Lacroix, A. (1998). Adrenocortical Overexpression of Gastric Inhibitory Polypeptide Receptor Underlies Food-Dependent Cushing’s Syndrome1. The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, 83(8), 2781–2785. https://doi.org/10.1210/jcem.83.8.5038

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