Gene variants have been reported to be associated with congenital hypothyroidism (CH), the purpose of this study was to analyze the mutation spectrum and prevalence of 12 known causative genes (TSHR, PAX8, NKX2.1, NKX2.5, FOXE1, DUOX2, TG, TPO, GLIS3, NIS, SLC26A4 and DEHAL1) in CH in China.
Homozygous loss-of-function mutations in the FOXE1 gene have been reported in several patients with partial or complete Bamforth-Lazarus syndrome: congenital hypothyroidism (CH) with thyroid dysgenesis (usually athyreosis), cleft palate, spiky hair, with or without choanal atresia, and bifid epiglottis.
Homozygous loss-of-function mutations in the FOXE1 gene have been reported in several patients with partial or complete Bamforth-Lazarus syndrome: congenital hypothyroidism (CH) with thyroid dysgenesis (usually athyreosis), cleft palate, spiky hair, with or without choanal atresia, and bifid epiglottis.
Loss of function mutations in TSHR, PAX8, NKX2.1, NKX2.5 and FOXE1 genes are responsible for some forms of inherited congenital hypothyroidism, with or without hypoplastic thyroid.
Recent studies have pointed to the correlation between FOXE1 polyalanine tract (FOXE1-polyAla) length polymorphism and genetic susceptibility to thyroid dysgenesis causing congenital hypothyroidism.
This study was designed to define the prevalence of CH due to mutations of PAX8, NKX2-1 [encoding thyroid transcription factor (TTF)-1], FOXE1 (encoding TTF-2), and NKX2-5 among patients with permanent primary CH and in the general population in Japan.
Altogether these observations strongly suggest that FOXE1 is involved in both familial and sporadic syndromic CH due to TD in association with cleft palate.
Familial cases of congenital hypothyroidism from thyroid dysgenesis (TD) (OMIM 218700) occur with a frequency 15-fold higher than by chance, FOXE1 is one of the candidate genes for this genetic predisposition and contains an alanine tract.
Our findings indicate that human thyroid development can occur despite loss of TTF-2 function and suggest that TTF-2 gene defects should also be considered in cases of syndromic CH without total athyreosis.
Genes associated with thyroid gland dysgenesis include the TSH receptor in non-syndromic congenital hypothyroidism, and Gsalpha and the thyroid transcription factors (TTF-1, TTF-2, and Pax-8), associated with different complex syndromes that include congenital hypothyroidism.
We performed a genetic analysis of the TTF-2 gene in 2 children with congenital hypothyroidism (CH) and cleft palate, 45 children with thyroid dysgenesis, 19 children with isolated cleft palate or cleft lip, 4 patients with thyroid hemiagenesis.