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Review
. 2022;16(2-3):138-146.
doi: 10.1159/000518273. Epub 2021 Aug 31.

AMH and AMHR2 Involvement in Congenital Disorders of Sex Development

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Review

AMH and AMHR2 Involvement in Congenital Disorders of Sex Development

Franco G Brunello et al. Sex Dev. 2022.

Abstract

Anti-müllerian hormone (AMH) is 1 of the 2 testicular hormones involved in male development of the genitalia during fetal life. When the testes differentiate, AMH is secreted by Sertoli cells and binds to its specific receptor type II (AMHR2) on the müllerian ducts, inducing their regression. In the female fetus, the lack of AMH allows the müllerian ducts to form the fallopian tubes, the uterus, and the upper part of the vagina. The human AMH gene maps to 19p13.3 and consists of 5 exons and 4 introns spanning 2,764 bp. The AMHR2 gene maps to 12q13.13, consists of 11 exons, and is 7,817 bp long. Defects in the AMH pathway are the underlying etiology of a subgroup of disorders of sex development (DSD) in 46,XY patients. The condition is known as the persistent müllerian duct syndrome (PMDS), characterized by the existence of a uterus and fallopian tubes in a boy with normally virilized external genitalia. Approximately 200 cases of patients with PMDS have been reported to date with clinical, biochemical, and molecular genetic characterization. An updated review is provided in this paper. With highly sensitive techniques, AMH and AMHR2 expression has also been detected in other tissues, and massive sequencing technologies have unveiled variants in AMH and AMHR2 genes in hitherto unsuspected conditions.

Keywords: Disorders of sex development; Fallopian tubes; Hypogonadotropic hypogonadism; Ovary; Persistent Müllerian duct syndrome; Sertoli cell; Testis; Uterus.

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