Molecular determination of progesterone receptor’s PROGINS allele (Alu insertion) and its association with the predisposition and susceptibility to polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS)

Polycystic ovary syndrome, previously known as Stein–Leventhal syndrome, is associated with altered reproductive endocrinology, predisposing a young woman towards the risk of PCOS. It has a prevalence of 6–20% among the reproductive-age women. Progesterone is a key hormone in the pathophysiology of...

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Veröffentlicht in:Mammalian genome 2022-09, Vol.33 (3), p.508-516
Hauptverfasser: Mir, Rashid, Altayar, Malik A., Hamadi, Abdullah, Tayeb, Faris J., Saeedi, Nizar H., Jalal, Mohammed M., Barnawi, Jameel, Alshammari, Sanad E., Mtiraoui, Nabil, Ali, Mohammed Eltigani M., Abuduhier, Faisel M., Ullah, Mohammad Fahad
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Polycystic ovary syndrome, previously known as Stein–Leventhal syndrome, is associated with altered reproductive endocrinology, predisposing a young woman towards the risk of PCOS. It has a prevalence of 6–20% among the reproductive-age women. Progesterone is a key hormone in the pathophysiology of PCOS and patients show diminished response (progesterone resistance), implicating the role of progesterone receptor (PR) as a factor in the disease etiology and prognosis. In this case–control study, we have used mutation-specific PCR (confirmed by Sanger sequencing) to detect the presence of a pathologically significant PR polymorphic variant called as PROGINS. The variant has an Alu insertion in intron G and has two SNPs in exon 4 and exon 5, with all the three aberrations in complete disequilibrium. Our results demonstrated a statistically significant difference in the frequencies of PROGINS between the PCOS patients and healthy controls ( p  = 0.047). The frequencies of the genotypes CC (A1/A1), CT (A1/A2), and TT (A2/A2) in patients were 74.50%, 20.58%, and 4.90%, and in healthy controls they were 87.28%, 11%, and 1.69%, respectively. Our results put forward two determining factors with regard to PCOS: (i) the frequency of PROGINS allele was significantly higher among PCOS patients compared to the healthy matched controls (0.15 vs 0.07) in the studied population, (ii) the PROGIN allele was significantly associated with the lower levels of serum progesterone in PCOS patients ( p  
ISSN:0938-8990
1432-1777
DOI:10.1007/s00335-021-09941-w