Genetic variation in the human androgen receptor gene is the major determinant of common early-onset androgenetic alopecia.

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Citation

Hillmer AM, Hanneken S, Ritzmann S, Becker T, Freudenberg J, Brockschmidt FF, Flaquer A, Freudenberg-Hua Y, Jamra RA, Metzen C, Heyn U, Schweiger N, Betz RC, Blaumeiser B, Hampe J, Schreiber S, Schulze TG, Hennies HC, Schumacher J, Propping P, Ruzicka T, Cichon S, Wienker TF, Kruse R, Nothen MM

Genetic variation in the human androgen receptor gene is the major determinant of common early-onset androgenetic alopecia.

Am J Hum Genet. 2005 Jul;77(1):140-8. Epub 2005 May 18.

PubMed ID
15902657 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

Androgenetic alopecia (AGA), or male-pattern baldness, is the most common form of hair loss. Its pathogenesis is androgen dependent, and genetic predisposition is the major requirement for the phenotype. We demonstrate that genetic variability in the androgen receptor gene (AR) is the cardinal prerequisite for the development of early-onset AGA, with an etiological fraction of 0.46. The investigation of a large number of genetic variants covering the AR locus suggests that a polyglycine-encoding GGN repeat in exon 1 is a plausible candidate for conferring the functional effect. The X-chromosomal location of AR stresses the importance of the maternal line in the inheritance of AGA.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Androgen receptorP10275Details