Contrasting Phenotypes in Resistance to Thyroid Hormone Alpha Correlate with Divergent Properties of Thyroid Hormone Receptor α1 Mutant Proteins.
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Authors
Moran, Carla
Agostini, Maura
McGowan, Anne
Fairall, Louise
Lyons, Greta
Rajanayagam, Odelia
Watson, Laura
Offiah, Amaka
Barton, John
Price, Susan
Schwabe, John
Publication Date
2017-07Journal Title
Thyroid
ISSN
1050-7256
Publisher
Mary Ann Liebert Inc
Volume
27
Issue
7
Language
eng
Type
Article
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Moran, C., Agostini, M., McGowan, A., Schoenmakers, E., Fairall, L., Lyons, G., Rajanayagam, O., et al. (2017). Contrasting Phenotypes in Resistance to Thyroid Hormone Alpha Correlate with Divergent Properties of Thyroid Hormone Receptor α1 Mutant Proteins.. Thyroid, 27 (7) https://doi.org/10.1089/thy.2017.0157
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Resistance to thyroid hormone alpha (RTHα), a disorder characterized by tissue-selective hypothyroidism and near-normal thyroid function tests due to thyroid receptor alpha gene mutations, is rare but probably under-recognized. This study sought to correlate the clinical characteristics and response to thyroxine (T4) therapy in two adolescent RTHα patients with the properties of the THRA mutation, affecting both TRα1 and TRα2 proteins, they harbored. METHODS: Clinical, auxological, biochemical, and physiological parameters were assessed in each patient at baseline and after T4 therapy. RESULTS: Heterozygous THRA mutations occurring de novo were identified in a 17-year-old male (patient P1; c.788C>T, p.A263V mutation) investigated for mild pubertal delay and in a 15-year-old male (patient P2; c.821T>C, p.L274P mutation) with short stature (0.4th centile), skeletal dysplasia, dysmorphic facies, and global developmental delay. Both individuals exhibited macrocephaly, delayed dentition, and constipation, together with a subnormal T4/triiodothyronine (T3) ratio, low reverse T3 levels, and mild anemia. When studied in vitro, A263V mutant TRα1 was transcriptionally impaired and inhibited the function of its wild-type counterpart at low (0.01-10 nM) T3 levels, with higher T3 concentrations (100 nM-1 μM) reversing dysfunction and such dominant negative inhibition. In contrast, L274P mutant TRα1 was transcriptionally inert, exerting significant dominant negative activity, only overcome with 10 μM of T3. Mirroring this, normal expression of KLF9, a TH-responsive target gene, was achieved in A263V mutation-containing peripheral blood mononuclear cells following 1 μM of T3 exposure, but with markedly reduced expression levels in L274P mutation-containing peripheral blood mononuclear cells, even with 10 μM of T3. Following T4 therapy, growth, body composition, dyspraxia, and constipation improved in P1, whereas growth retardation and constipation in P2 were unchanged. Neither A263V nor L274P mutations exhibited gain or loss of function in the TRα2 background, and no additional phenotype attributable to this was discerned. CONCLUSIONS: This study correlates a milder clinical phenotype and favorable response to T4 therapy in a RTHα patient (P1) with heterozygosity for mutant TRα1 exhibiting partial, T3-reversible, loss of function. In contrast, a more severe clinical phenotype refractory to hormone therapy was evident in another case (P2) associated with severe, virtually irreversible, dysfunction of mutant TRα1.
Keywords
dominant negative, resistance to thyroid hormone alpha, thyroid hormone action, thyroid hormone receptor alpha, Adolescent, Genetic Predisposition to Disease, Genotype, Humans, Male, Mutation, Phenotype, Symptom Assessment, Thyroid Hormone Receptors alpha, Thyroid Hormone Resistance Syndrome, Thyroxine, Treatment Outcome, Young Adult
Sponsorship
Medical Research Council (MC_UU_12012/5)
Wellcome Trust (095564/Z/11/Z)
Identifiers
External DOI: https://doi.org/10.1089/thy.2017.0157
This record's URL: https://www.repository.cam.ac.uk/handle/1810/282961
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