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Braz. j. med. biol. res ; 27(12): 2745-57, Dec. 1994. tab
Article Dans Anglais | LILACS | ID: lil-153279

Résumé

1. Hereditary goiter and the various degrees of thyroid hypofunction are the result of structural changes in the thyroglobulin (Tg) or thyroperoxidase (TPO) proteins, the inability to couple iodotyrosines or defective iodination, impairing or substantially altering the synthesis of T4 and T3. 2. The first nmutations in the Tg and TPO genes responsable for human cases of dys-hormonogenesis have been described. The mutation in two siblings with hereditary goiter and marked impairment of Tg synthesis was a cytosine to thymine transition creating a stop codon at postion 1510. The point mutation is removed by the preferential accumulation of a 171-nt deleted Tg mRNA. In another subject, molecular studies revealed that exon 4 was missing from the major Tg transcript due to a cytosine to guanine transversion at postion minus 3 in the acceptor splice site of intron 3. 3. Genomic DNA studies identified a duplication of a 4-base sequence in the eight exon of the TPO gene. Interestingly, besides abolishing the enzymatic activity by disrupting the reading frame of the messenger RNA and introducing stop codons, the GGCC duplication also unmasks a cryptic acceptor splice site in exon 9. 4. In conclusion, the identification of different molecular defects provied evidence that hereditary goiter associated with abnormal Tg or TPO synthesis is caused by heterogeneous genetic alterations


Sujets)
Humains , Goitre/génétique , Techniques in vitro , Myeloperoxidase/génétique , Thyroglobuline/génétique , Répartition par âge , Séquence d'acides aminés , Régulation de l'expression des gènes , Goitre/enzymologie , Données de séquences moléculaires , Structure moléculaire , Mutation , Réaction de polymérisation en chaîne , Polymorphisme de restriction , Thyroglobuline/biosynthèse
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