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Hoffmann, R. A wiki for the life sciences where authorship matters. Nature Genetics (2008)
 
 
 

Combined pituitary hormone deficiency caused by compound heterozygosity for two novel mutations in the POU domain of the Pit1/POU1F1 gene.

The POU homeodomain containing transcriptional activator POU1F1, formerly called Pit1 or GHF-1, is required for the embryological determination and postnatal secretory function of the GH-, PRL-, and TSH-producing cells in the anterior pituitary. Several mutations in the gene encoding POU1F1 have been described, resulting in a syndrome of combined pituitary hormone deficiency involving these three hormones. Most of the patients with this phenotype have either a dominant negative mutation in codon 271 (R271W) or are homozygous for a recessive mutation in the POU1F1 gene; to date only one case has been reported with compound heterozygosity for two point mutations. Here, we describe a boy with severe deficiencies of GH, PRL, and TSH who had compound heterozygosity for two novel point mutations in the POU1F1 gene: a 1-bp deletion frameshift mutation (747delA), the first one described to date in this gene, which leads to a nonfunctional truncated protein lacking the entire DNA recognition helix of the POU homeodomain, and a missense mutation in the C-terminal end of the fourth alpha-helix of the POU-specific domain (W193R),which causes a 500-fold reduction in the ability to bind to DNA and activate transcription.[1]

References

  1. Combined pituitary hormone deficiency caused by compound heterozygosity for two novel mutations in the POU domain of the Pit1/POU1F1 gene. Hendriks-Stegeman, B.I., Augustijn, K.D., Bakker, B., Holthuizen, P., van der Vliet, P.C., Jansen, M. J. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab. (2001) [Pubmed]
 
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