Short Stature Caused by a Natural Growth Hormone Antagonist

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<jats:p>Severe short stature in a male child due to a single mutation in the GH-1 gene was first reported in 1996 by Takahashi et al. [N Engl J Med 1996;334:432–436]. This missense mutation was predicted to convert codon 77 from arginine (R) to cysteine (C). The child’s chronological age was 4 years and 11 months, and his bone age 2 years and 6 months, i.e., equal to only 51% of his chronological age. Body proportions were normal except for the prominent forehead and saddle nose. Pituitary size was normal on magnetic resonance imaging examinations. Serum IGF-1, IGFBP-3 and GHBP were all decreased or at the lower limit of the normal range. Nocturnal urinary growth hormone (GH) excretion was high. Isoelectric focusing analysis revealed the presence of an abnormal GH peak in addition to the normal one. The R77C mutant GH possessed a 6 times greater affinity to GHBP than the wild-type GH, and inhibited tyrosine phosphorylation in IM-9 cells 10 times more potently than the wild-type GH, showing an antagonistic or a dominant negative action. In agreement with the antagonistic property of the mutant GH exhibited, the child did not show any increase in serum IGF-1 levels after exogenous hGH administration. It should be noted that the child in this study is not a typical case of Kowarski syndrome in which endogenous GH is found to be simply bioinactive, as in the patient we recently described elsewhere. Therefore, this patient’s condition should be categorized as a new syndrome of short stature caused by a natural GH antagonist.</jats:p>

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詳細情報 詳細情報について

  • CRID
    1872553967471260032
  • DOI
    10.1159/000053067
  • ISSN
    16632826
    16632818
  • PubMed
    9554469
  • データソース種別
    • OpenAIRE

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