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Requirement of FAT and DCHS protocadherins during hypothalamic-pituitary development

Authors :
Emily J. Lodge
Paraskevi Xekouki
Tatiane S. Silva
Cristiane Kochi
Carlos A. Longui
Fabio R. Faucz
Alice Santambrogio
James L. Mills
Nathan Pankratz
John Lane
Dominika Sosnowska
Tina Hodgson
Amanda L. Patist
Philippa Francis-West
Françoise Helmbacher
Constantine A. Stratakis
Cynthia L. Andoniadou
Source :
JCI Insight, Vol 5, Iss 23 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
American Society for Clinical investigation, 2020.

Abstract

Pituitary developmental defects lead to partial or complete hormone deficiency and significant health problems. The majority of cases are sporadic and of unknown cause. We screened 28 patients with pituitary stalk interruption syndrome for mutations in the FAT/DCHS family of protocadherins that have high functional redundancy. We identified 7 variants, 4 of which are putatively damaging, in FAT2 and DCHS2 in 6 patients with pituitary developmental defects recruited through a cohort of patients with mostly ectopic posterior pituitary gland and/or pituitary stalk interruption. All patients had growth hormone deficiency, and 2 presented with multiple hormone deficiencies and small glands. FAT2 and DCHS2 were strongly expressed in the mesenchyme surrounding the normal developing human pituitary. We analyzed Dchs2–/– mouse mutants and identified anterior pituitary hypoplasia and partially penetrant infundibular defects. Overlapping infundibular abnormalities and distinct anterior pituitary morphogenesis defects were observed in Fat4–/– and Dchs1–/– mouse mutants, but all animal models displayed normal commitment to anterior pituitary cell types. Together our data implicate FAT/DCHS protocadherins in normal hypothalamic-pituitary development and identify FAT2 and DCHS2 as candidates underlying pituitary gland developmental defects such as ectopic pituitary gland and/or pituitary stalk interruption.

Subjects

Subjects :
Development
Endocrinology
Medicine

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23793708
Volume :
5
Issue :
23
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
JCI Insight
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.44bddb906c75417c9a8501cac607a77e
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1172/jci.insight.134310