Skeletal Features and Growth Patterns in 14 Patients with Haploinsufficiency of SHOX: Implications for the Development of Turner Syndrome
We report on clinical features in 14 Japanese patients (4 males and 10 females) with partial monosomy of the short arm pseudoautosomal region involving SHOX (n = 11) or total monosomy of the pseudoautosomal region with no involvement of disease genes on the sex-differential regions (n = 3). Skeletal...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism 1999-12, Vol.84 (12), p.4613-4621 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | We report on clinical features in 14 Japanese patients (4 males and 10
females) with partial monosomy of the short arm pseudoautosomal region
involving SHOX (n = 11) or total monosomy of the pseudoautosomal
region with no involvement of disease genes on the sex-differential
regions (n = 3). Skeletal assessment showed that three patients
had no discernible skeletal abnormalities, one patient exhibited short
4th metacarpals and borderline cubitus valgus, and the remaining 10
patients had Madelung deformity and/or mesomelia characteristic of
Léri-Weill dyschondrosteosis (LWD), together with short 4th
metacarpals and/or cubitus valgus. Skeletal lesions were more severe in
females and became obvious with age. Growth evaluation revealed that
patients without LWD grew along by the −2 sd growth curve
before puberty and showed a normal or exaggerated pubertal growth
spurt, whereas those with LWD grew along by the standard growth curves
before puberty but exhibited an attenuated pubertal growth spurt and
resultant short stature. Maturational assessment indicated a tendency
of relatively early maturation in patients with LWD. There was no
correlation between the clinical phenotype and the deletion size.
These findings suggest that haploinsufficiency of SHOX causes not only
short stature but also Turner skeletal anomalies (such as short 4th
metacarpals, cubitus valgus, and LWD) and that growth pattern is
primarily dependent on the presence or absence of LWD. Because skeletal
lesions have occurred in a female-dominant and age-influenced fashion,
it is inferred that estrogens exert a maturational effect on skeletal
tissues that are susceptible to premature fusion of growth plates
because of haploinsufficiency of SHOX, facilitating the development of
skeletal lesions. |
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ISSN: | 0021-972X 1945-7197 |
DOI: | 10.1210/jcem.84.12.6289 |