Abstract
We investigated whether molecular defects in the CYP21 gene were detectable in two common sex chromosome aberrations, the Turner and the Klinefelter syndromes. We found abnormal 17-hydroxyprogesterone levels after adrenal stimulation in 26/60 (43.3%) patients affected by these chromosome aberrations, as compared with only 11/68 (16.2%) normal controls (P=0.0014, odds ratio 4.0). Screening of the CYP21 gene identified a single Val281Leu missense mutation in exon 7 in 9/63 (14.3%) of the patients, all nine of whom were heterozygote carriers; the mutation frequency was significantly higher than in the general population (P=0.007, odds ratio=3.5). The hormonal and molecular data indicate that these common sex chromosome aberrations are associated with a remarkably high frequency of steroidogenic defects. It may be hypothesised that reduced levels of steroid 21-hydroxylase could confer a survival advantage, leading to a successful pregnancy.
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Mantovani, V., Dondi, E., Larizza, D., Cisternino, M., Bragliani, M., Viggiani, M., … Cuccia, M. (2002). Do reduced levels of steroid 21-hydroxylase confer a survival advantage in fetuses affected by sex chromosome aberrations? European Journal of Human Genetics, 10(2), 137–140. https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.ejhg.5200778
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