TY - JOUR
T1 - Next generation sequencing-based mutation screening of 86 patients with idiopathic short stature
AU - The Japanese SHOX study group
AU - Hattori, Atsushi
AU - Katoh-Fukui, Yuko
AU - Nakamura, Akie
AU - Matsubara, Keiko
AU - Kamimaki, Tsutomu
AU - Tanaka, Hiroyuki
AU - Dateki, Sumito
AU - Adachi, Masanori
AU - Muroya, Koji
AU - Yoshida, Shinobu
AU - Ida, Shinobu
AU - Mitani, Marie
AU - Nagasaki, Keisuke
AU - Ogata, Tsutomu
AU - Suzuki, Erina
AU - Hata, Kenichiro
AU - Nakabayashi, Kazuhiko
AU - Matsubara, Yoichi
AU - Narumi, Satoshi
AU - Tanaka, Toshiaki
AU - Fukami, Maki
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors thank Dr. Kohji Okamura and Ms. Tomoko Jinno (National Research Institute for Child Health and Development) for their support in molecular analyses. This study was partly supported by a research grant from JCR Pharmaceuticals. This study was also supported by the Grants-in-Aid from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science; and by the Grants from the Ministry of Health, Labor and Welfare, the Japan Agency for Medical Research and Development, the National Center for Child Health and Development and the Takeda foundation.
Publisher Copyright:
© The Japan Endocrine Society.
PY - 2017
Y1 - 2017
N2 - Although mutations in ACAN, FGFR3, NPR2, and SHOX typically lead to skeletal dysplasia, and mutations in GHRHR, GH1, GHR, STAT5B, IGF1, IGFALS, and IGF1R usually underlie hormonal defects of the growth hormone (GH)-insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF1) axis, such mutations have also been identified in patients with idiopathic short stature (ISS). Of these, SHOX abnormalities are known to account for a certain percentage of ISS cases, whereas the frequency of mutations in the other 10 genes in ISS cohorts remains unknown. Here, we performed next-generation sequencing-based mutation screening of the 10 genes in 86 unrelated Japanese ISS patients without SHOX abnormalities. We searched for rare protein-altering variants. The functional significance of the identified variants was assessed by in silico analyses. Consequently, we identified 18 heterozygous rare variants in 19 patients, including four probable damaging variants in ACAN, six pathogenicity-unknown variants in FGFR3, GHRHR, GHR, and IGFALS, and eight possible benign variants. Pathogenic variants in NPR2, GH1, and IGF1 were absent from our cohort. Unlike previously reported patients with ACAN mutations, our four patients with ACAN variants manifested non-specific short stature with age-appropriate or mildly delayed bone ages, and had parents of normal stature. These results indicate that ACAN mutations can underlie ISS without characteristic skeletal features, and that such mutations are possibly associated with de novo occurrence or low penetrance. In addition, our data imply that mutations in FGFR3, NPR2, and GH-IGF1 axis genes play only limited roles in the etiology of ISS.
AB - Although mutations in ACAN, FGFR3, NPR2, and SHOX typically lead to skeletal dysplasia, and mutations in GHRHR, GH1, GHR, STAT5B, IGF1, IGFALS, and IGF1R usually underlie hormonal defects of the growth hormone (GH)-insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF1) axis, such mutations have also been identified in patients with idiopathic short stature (ISS). Of these, SHOX abnormalities are known to account for a certain percentage of ISS cases, whereas the frequency of mutations in the other 10 genes in ISS cohorts remains unknown. Here, we performed next-generation sequencing-based mutation screening of the 10 genes in 86 unrelated Japanese ISS patients without SHOX abnormalities. We searched for rare protein-altering variants. The functional significance of the identified variants was assessed by in silico analyses. Consequently, we identified 18 heterozygous rare variants in 19 patients, including four probable damaging variants in ACAN, six pathogenicity-unknown variants in FGFR3, GHRHR, GHR, and IGFALS, and eight possible benign variants. Pathogenic variants in NPR2, GH1, and IGF1 were absent from our cohort. Unlike previously reported patients with ACAN mutations, our four patients with ACAN variants manifested non-specific short stature with age-appropriate or mildly delayed bone ages, and had parents of normal stature. These results indicate that ACAN mutations can underlie ISS without characteristic skeletal features, and that such mutations are possibly associated with de novo occurrence or low penetrance. In addition, our data imply that mutations in FGFR3, NPR2, and GH-IGF1 axis genes play only limited roles in the etiology of ISS.
KW - ACAN
KW - Growth hormone - insulin-like grotwh factor 1 axis
KW - Idiopathic short stature
KW - Mutation
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U2 - 10.1507/endocrj.EJ17-0150
DO - 10.1507/endocrj.EJ17-0150
M3 - Article
C2 - 28768959
AN - SCOPUS:85032695757
SN - 0918-8959
VL - 64
SP - 947
EP - 954
JO - Endocrine Journal
JF - Endocrine Journal
IS - 10
ER -