Eur J Endocrinol
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DOI: 10.1530/eje.0.1390157
European Journal of Endocrinology, Vol 139, Issue 2, 157-160
Copyright © 1998 by European Society of Endocrinology
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Articles

Absence of activating mutations in the GnRH receptor gene in human pituitary gonadotroph adenomas

P Chanson, N De Roux, J Young, JM Bidart, P Jacquet, M Misrahi, E Milgrom, and G Schaison

Service d'Endocrinologie et des Maladies de la Reproduction, Institut Federatif de Recherches 21, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Bicetre, France.

The monoclonal origin of gonadotropin-secreting pituitary adenomas has been well demonstrated but only few molecular abnormalities have so far been recognized in these tumors. For many years, several authors have suggested a role for GnRH and/or GnRH receptors (GnRH-R) in the development of these pituitary adenomas. To test the hypothesis that mutant genes encoding a constitutively activated GnRH-R might be involved in the pathogenesis of these tumors, the sequence of the GnRH-R gene was analyzed in tumoral pituitary tissue obtained from ten patients (six female, four male). The pituitary gonadotropin-secreting adenoma was associated with in vivo hypersecretion of FSH, LH and/or free alpha-subunit (n = 7) or was clinically silent (normal plasma levels of gonadotropins or free alpha-subunit, n = 3). In all cases, immunocytochemical studies of the removed adenoma confirmed their gonadotroph nature by revealing positivity for FSH, LH and/or alpha-subunit. Genomic DNA was extracted from the pathological tissue obtained at neurosurgery. Eight sequencing primers were used to amplify the three exons of the GnRH-R gene from tumoral DNA. The entire coding sequence of the GnRH-R gene was sequenced in the ten adenomas. No mutation was found in any of the tumor specimens examined. In conclusion, mutations in the GnRH receptor coding sequence occur infrequently if at all in gonadotropin-secreting pituitary adenomas.


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A. Lania, G. Mantovani, and A. Spada
Genetics of Pituitary Tumors: Focus on G-Protein Mutations
Experimental Biology and Medicine, October 1, 2003; 228(9): 1004 - 1017.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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