Resistance to thyroid hormone caused by a mutation in thyroid hormone receptor (TR)alpha1 and TRalpha2: clinical, biochemical, and genetic analyses of three related patients.

Article Details

Citation

Moran C, Agostini M, Visser WE, Schoenmakers E, Schoenmakers N, Offiah AC, Poole K, Rajanayagam O, Lyons G, Halsall D, Gurnell M, Chrysis D, Efthymiadou A, Buchanan C, Aylwin S, Chatterjee KK

Resistance to thyroid hormone caused by a mutation in thyroid hormone receptor (TR)alpha1 and TRalpha2: clinical, biochemical, and genetic analyses of three related patients.

Lancet Diabetes Endocrinol. 2014 Aug;2(8):619-26. doi: 10.1016/S2213-8587(14)70111-1. Epub 2014 Jun 23.

PubMed ID
24969835 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

BACKGROUND: The thyroid hormone receptor alpha gene (THRA) transcript is alternatively spliced to generate either thyroid hormone receptor (TR)alpha1 or a non-hormone-binding variant protein, TRalpha2, the function of which is unknown. Here, we describe the first patients identified with a mutation in THRA that affects both TRalpha1 and TRalpha2, and compare them with patients who have resistance to thyroid hormone owing to a mutation affecting only TRalpha1, to delineate the relative roles of TRalpha1 and TRalpha2. METHODS: We did clinical, biochemical, and genetic analyses of an index case and her two sons. We assessed physical and radiological features, thyroid function, physiological and biochemical markers of thyroid hormone action, and THRA sequence. FINDINGS: The patients presented in childhood with growth failure, developmental delay, and constipation, which improved after treatment with thyroxine, despite normal concentrations of circulating thyroid hormones. They had similar clinical (macrocephaly, broad faces, skin tags, motor dyspraxia, slow speech), biochemical (subnormal ratio of free thyroxine:free tri-iodothyronine [T3], low concentration of total reverse T3, high concentration of creatine kinase, mild anaemia), and radiological (thickened calvarium) features to patients with TRalpha1-mediated resistance to thyroid hormone, although our patients had a heterozygous mis-sense mutation (Ala263Val) in both TRalpha1 and TRalpha2 proteins. The Ala263Val mutant TRalpha1 inhibited the transcriptional function of normal receptor in a dominant-negative fashion. By contrast, function of Ala263Val mutant TRalpha2 matched its normal counterpart. In vitro, high concentrations of T3 restored transcriptional activity of Ala263Val mutant TRalpha1, and reversed the dominant-negative inhibition of its normal counterpart. High concentrations of T3 restored expression of thyroid hormone-responsive target genes in patient-derived blood cells. INTERPRETATION: TRalpha1 seems to be the principal functional product of the THRA gene. Thyroxine treatment alleviates hormone resistance in patients with mutations affecting this gene, possibly ameliorating the phenotype. These findings will help the diagnosis and treatment of other patients with resistance to thyroid hormone resulting from mutations in THRA. FUNDING: Wellcome Trust, NIHR Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre, Marie Curie Actions, Foundation for Development of Internal Medicine in Europe.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Thyroid hormone receptor alphaP10827Details