AI Article Synopsis

  • Isolated GH deficiency (IGHD) can have a genetic basis, with IGHD-IB often resulting from mutations in the GHRH receptor or GH genes, but many cases remain genetically unexplained.
  • Muscarinic cholinergic stimulation is known to enhance GH secretion, implicating muscarinic acetylcholine receptors (mAchRs) in this process, and specific studies in mice showed similar GH deficiency when the M(3) receptor was disrupted.
  • Analysis of 39 IGHD-IB families revealed a rare mutation in one family (V65I in the M(3) receptor), indicating that mAchR mutations are infrequent in familial IGHD type IB, occurring in less than 2.6% of cases

Article Abstract

Background: Isolated GH deficiency (IGHD) is familial in 5-30% of patients. The most frequent form (IGHD-IB) has autosomal recessive inheritance, and it is known that it can be caused by mutations in the GHRH receptor (GHRHR) gene or in the GH gene. However, most forms of IGHD-IB have an unknown genetic cause. In normal subjects, muscarinic cholinergic stimulation causes an increase in pituitary GH release, whereas its blockade has the opposite effect, suggesting that a muscarinic acetylcholine receptor (mAchR) is involved in stimulating GH secretion. Five types of mAchR (M(1)-M(5)) exist. A transgenic mouse in which the function of the M(3) receptor was selectively ablated in the central nervous system has isolated GH deficiency similar to animals with defective GHRH or GHRHR gene.

Objective: We hypothesized that mAchR mutations may cause a subset of familial IGHD.

Patients/methods: After confirming the expression of M(1)-M(5) receptor mRNA in human hypothalamus, we analyzed the index cases of 39 families with IGHD-IB for mutations in the genes encoding for the five receptors. Coding sequences for each of the five mAchRs were subjected to direct sequencing.

Results: In one family, an affected member was homozygous for a M(3) change in codon 65 that replaces valine with isoleucine (V65I). The V65I receptor was expressed in CHO cells where it had normal ability to transmit methacholine signaling.

Conclusion: mAchR mutations are absent or rare (less than 2.6%) in familial IGHD type IB.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2708943PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jc.2009-0512DOI Listing

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