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. 2010 Apr;95(4):1981-5.
doi: 10.1210/jc.2009-2373. Epub 2010 Feb 15.

Transcription factor mutations and congenital hypothyroidism: systematic genetic screening of a population-based cohort of Japanese patients

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Transcription factor mutations and congenital hypothyroidism: systematic genetic screening of a population-based cohort of Japanese patients

Satoshi Narumi et al. J Clin Endocrinol Metab. 2010 Apr.

Abstract

Context: Gene mutations of transcription factors that are predominantly expressed in the thyroid gland cause congenital hypothyroidism (CH). The prevalence of CH due to transcription factor mutations remains undetermined.

Objective: This study was designed to define the prevalence of CH due to mutations of PAX8, NKX2-1 [encoding thyroid transcription factor (TTF)-1], FOXE1 (encoding TTF-2), and NKX2-5 among patients with permanent primary CH and in the general population in Japan.

Subjects and methods: We enrolled 102 CH patients that represent 353,000 newborns born in Kanagawa prefecture from October 1979 to June 2006. We sequenced PAX8, NKX2-1, FOXE1, and NKX2-5 using PCR-based methods. Additionally, deletion/duplication of PAX8, NKX2-1, and FOXE1 was screened by multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification. Molecular functions of putative mutations were verified in vitro.

Results: We identified a novel small duplication of PAX8 (p.K80_A84dup) in two half-sibling patients with thyroid hypoplasia. We also found a novel NKX2-1 variation (p.H60W) in a sporadic nonsyndromic CH patient. In vitro experiments showed that K80_A84dup PAX8 had impaired transactivation of the thyroglobulin promoter. H60W TTF-1 exhibited a comparable transactivating capacity with wild-type TTF-1, suggesting a benign variation. We estimate the prevalence of PAX8 mutations to be 2.0% (two in 102) among Japanese CH patients and one in 176,000 (two in 353,000) in the general Japanese population.

Conclusions: Using a population-based sample, we confirmed that a minor subset of CH patients has transcription factor mutations, but they are rare. In our cohort, PAX8 mutations were the leading cause of such a rare condition.

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