Searchable abstracts of presentations at key conferences in endocrinology

ea0059cc5 | Featured Clinical Cases | SFEBES2018

A second GH Receptor pseudoexon mutation causing frameshift and severe postnatal growth failure

Cottrell Emily , Maharaj Avinaash , Chatterjee Sumana , Grandone Anna , Cirillo Grazia , del Giudice Emanuele Miraglia , Storr Helen L , Metherell Louise A

Background: GH Insensitivity (GHI) is usually caused by mutations in the GH receptor (GHR). Our centre previously described the first GHR pseudoexon mutation (42700896A>G, c. 618+792A>G). Inclusion of this 108bp pseudoexon is predicted to lead to in-frame insertion of 36 amino acid residues in the dimerization domain of the GHR. This results in defective trafficking rather than impaired signalling, causing partial loss-of-function and moderat...

ea0058oc5.7 | Oral Communications 5 | BSPED2018

A novel GHR pseudoexon mutation causing frameshift and severe postnatal growth failure

Cottrell Emily , Maharaj Avinaash , Chatterjee Sumana , Grandone Anna , Cirillo Grazia , Miraglia del Giudice Emanuele , Metherell Louise A , Storr Helen L

Background: Growth Hormone Insensitivity is usually caused by mutations in the Growth Hormone receptor (GHR). Patients present with short stature, high GH levels, low IGF-I levels and typical Laron syndrome facial features. Our centre previously described the first GHR pseudoexon mutation (42700896A>G, c.618+792A>G). The inclusion of this pseudoexon is predicted to cause in-frame insertion of 36 amino acid residues between exons 6 and 7. This insertion in the ...

ea0066p73 | Pituitary | BSPED2019

Three novel Growth Hormone Receptor (GHR) splicing mutations causing a spectrum of Growth Hormone Insensitivity

Cottrell Emily , Maharaj Avinaash , Ladha Tasneem , Chatterjee Sumana , Grandone Anna , Cirillo Grazia , del Giudice Emanuele Miraglia , Kostalova Ludmila , Vitariusova Eva , Hwa Vivian , Metherell Louise A , Storr Helen L

Introduction: Growth Hormone Insensitivity (GHI) is characterised by a triad of short stature (SS), IGF-1 deficiency and normal/high GH levels. ‘Classical’ GHI due to homozygous exonic GHR mutations results in extreme SS with dysmorphic and metabolic abnormalities. Heterozygous exon 9 GHR mutations are rare and exert dominant negative effects due to impairment of GHR dimerization/downstream signalling associated with a milder GHI phenotype. Only sev...

ea0078oc4.3 | Oral Communications 4 | BSPED2021

Growth hormone receptor 6Ω pseudoexon activation: a novel cause of severe growth hormone insensitivity

Cottrell Emily , Maharaj Avinaash , Williams Jack , Chatterjee Sumana , Cirillo Grazia , del Giudice Emanuele Miraglia , Festa Adalgisa , Palumbo Stefania , Capalbo Donatella , Salerno Mariacarolina , Pignata Claudio , Savage Martin O. , Schilbach Katharina , Bidlingmaier Martin , Hwa Vivian , Metherell Louise A. , Grandone Anna , Helen L. Storr

Context: Severe or ‘classical’ growth hormone insensitivity (GHI) is characterised by extreme short stature, dysmorphism and metabolic anomalies. It is caused by homozygous or compound heterozygous mutations of the Growth Hormone Receptor gene (GHR). Genetic analysis traditionally focuses on the exonic regions of gene(s). The non-coding regions of the genome may harbour numerous disease-causing mutations that are not well recognised or understood.<p clas...