17Beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase-3 deficiency: diagnosis, phenotypic variability, population genetics, and worldwide distribution of ancient and de novo mutations

17Beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase-3 (17betaHSD3) deficiency is an autosomal recessive form of male pseudohermaphroditism caused by mutations in the HSD17B3 gene. In a nationwide study on male pseudohermaphroditism among all pediatric endocrinologists and clinical geneticists in The Netherlands, 18 17betaHSD3-deficient index cases were identified, 12 of whom initially had received the tentative diagnosis androgen insensitivity syndrome (AIS). The phenotypes and genotypes of these patients were studied. Endocrine diagnostic methods were evaluated in comparison to mutation analysis of the HSD17... Mehr ...

Verfasser: Boehmer, A.L.M. (Annemie)
Halley, D.J.J. (Dicky)
Ruiter, P.E. (Petra) de
Niermeijer, M.F. (Martinus)
Andersson, S. (Stefan)
Jong, F.H. (Frank) de
Bode, H.H. (Hans)
Drop, S.L.S. (Stenvert)
Kayserili, H. (Hülya)
Vroede, M.A. de
Rodrigues, C. (Cidade)
Otten, B.J. (Barto)
Mendonça, B.B. (Berenice)
Delemarre-van de Waal, H.A. (Henriette)
Rouwé, C.W. (Catrienus)
Brinkmann, A.O. (Albert)
Sandkuijl, L.A. (Lodewijk)
Dokumenttyp: Artikel
Erscheinungsdatum: 1999
Schlagwörter: *Genetics / Population / *Phenotype / 17-Hydroxysteroid Dehydrogenases/*deficiency/genetics / Androstenedione/blood / Gene Frequency / Haplotypes / Heterozygote / Homozygote / Humans / Male / Netherlands / Pseudohermaphroditism/enzymology/genetics / RNA Splicing / Research Support / Non-U.S. Gov't / U.S. Gov't / P.H.S / Testosterone/blood
Sprache: Englisch
Permalink: https://search.fid-benelux.de/Record/base-27218166
Datenquelle: BASE; Originalkatalog
Powered By: BASE
Link(s) : http://repub.eur.nl/pub/9214

17Beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase-3 (17betaHSD3) deficiency is an autosomal recessive form of male pseudohermaphroditism caused by mutations in the HSD17B3 gene. In a nationwide study on male pseudohermaphroditism among all pediatric endocrinologists and clinical geneticists in The Netherlands, 18 17betaHSD3-deficient index cases were identified, 12 of whom initially had received the tentative diagnosis androgen insensitivity syndrome (AIS). The phenotypes and genotypes of these patients were studied. Endocrine diagnostic methods were evaluated in comparison to mutation analysis of the HSD17B3 gene. RT-PCR studies were performed on testicular ribonucleic acid of patients homozygous for two different splice site mutations. The minimal incidence of 17betaHSD3 deficiency in The Netherlands and the corresponding carrier frequency were calculated. Haplotype analysis of the chromosomal region of the HSD17B3 gene in Europeans, North Americans, Latin Americans, Australians, and Arabs was used to establish whether recurrent identical mutations were ancient or had repeatedly occurred de novo. In genotypically identical cases, phenotypic variation for external sexual development was observed. Gonadotropin-stimulated serum testosterone/androstenedione ratios in 17betaHSD3-deficient patients were discriminative in all cases and did not overlap with ratios in normal controls or with ratios in AIS patients. In all investigated patients both HSD17B3 alleles were mutated. The intronic mutations 325 + 4;A-->T and 655-1;G-->A disrupted normal splicing, but a small amount of wild-type messenger ribonucleic acid was still made in patients homozygous for 655-1;G-->A. The minimal incid