๐Ÿ‘ค Kaori Yamoto

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Wataru Tanikawa, Shingo Okamoto, Osamu Ohara +8 more ยท 2026 ยท The Journal of clinical endocrinology and metabolism ยท added 2026-04-24
Congenital hypogonadotropic hypogonadism (CHH) is a genetically heterogeneous disorder, with multiple causative and candidate genes identified to date. To clarify underlying genetic factors involved i Show more
Congenital hypogonadotropic hypogonadism (CHH) is a genetically heterogeneous disorder, with multiple causative and candidate genes identified to date. To clarify underlying genetic factors involved in the development of CHH. We examined 88 Japanese patients with CHH using gene panel analysis (GPA) for 14 representative causative genes and whole-exome sequencing (WES) which was initially focused on 41 causative/candidate genes and subsequently expanded to other genes. We extracted rare variants (frequency of <0.01) and performed pathogenic assessment using refined American College of Medical Genetics and Genomics/Association for Molecular Pathology criteria and registered information in ClinVar. Twenty-seven pathogenic/likely pathogenic variants were identified in 30 patients through GPA performed for all 88 patients and in 4 patients through WES performed for 58 patients in whom no obvious disease-causing variants were revealed by GPA. They resided in previously known ANOS1 (6 variants in 7 patients), CHD7 (3 variants in 3 patients), FGFR1 (14 variants in 15 patients), PROKR2 (2 variants in 8 patients), and SOX10 (1 variant in 1 patient), and a hitherto unrecognized ZNF462 (1 variant in 1 patient). One patient had 2 variants. Additionally, potentially CHH-related variants were detected in 12 genes including SEMA4D and CDH2 postulated on the CHH-related molecular network. Furthermore, in the 41 CHH-related genes, the frequency of oligogenicity was significantly higher and the number of rare variants per individual was significantly larger in 54 CHH patients with no discernible pathogenic/likely pathogenic variants than in 100 control individuals. The results support the notion that CHH occurs not only as a monogenic disorder but also as an oligogenic/multifactorial disorder, and suggest the involvement of ZNF462, SEMA4D, and CDH2 variants in the development of CHH. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1210/clinem/dgaf548
FGFR1