Genetic Analysis of 29 Kindreds with Generalized and Pituitary Resistance to Thyroid Hormone: Identification of Thirteen Novel Mutations in the Thyroid Hormone Receptor β Gene

219Citations
Citations of this article
33Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

Abstract

Resistance to thyroid hormone (RTH), with elevated serum free thyroid hormones and nonsuppressed thyrotropin levels, is either relatively asymptomatic, suggesting a generalized disorder (GRTH) or associated with thyrotoxic features, indicating possible selective pituitary resistance (PRTH). 20 GRTH and 9 PRTH cases, sporadic or dominantly inherited, were analyzed. Affected individuals were heterozygous for single nucleotide substitutions in the thyroid hormone receptor β gene, except for a single case of a seven nucleotide insertion. With one exception, the corresponding 13 novel and 7 known codon changes localized to and extended the boundaries of two mutation clusters in the hormone-binding domain of the receptor. 15 kindreds shared 6 different mutations, and haplotype analyses of the mutant allele showed that they occurred independently. The majority (14 out of 19) of the recurrent but a minority (1 out of 10) of unique mutations were transitions of CpG dinucleotides. Mutant receptor binding to ligand was moderately or severely impaired and did not correlate with the magnitude of thyroid dysfunction. There was no association between clinical features and the nature or location of a receptor mutation. These observations suggest that GRTH and PRTH are phenotypic variants of the same genetic disorder, whose clinical expression may be modulated by other non-mutation-related factors.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Adams, M., Matthews, C., Collingwood, T. N., Tone, Y., Beck-Peccoz, P., & Chatterjee, K. K. (1994). Genetic Analysis of 29 Kindreds with Generalized and Pituitary Resistance to Thyroid Hormone: Identification of Thirteen Novel Mutations in the Thyroid Hormone Receptor β Gene. Journal of Clinical Investigation, 94(2), 506–515. https://doi.org/10.1172/jci117362

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free