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Human growth hormone (GH1) gene polymorphism map in a normal-statured adult population

OBJECTIVE: GH1 gene presents a complex map of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the entire promoter, coding and noncoding regions. The aim of the study was to establish the complete map of GH1 gene SNPs in our control normal population and to analyse its association with adult height. DESIGN...

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Autores principales: Esteban, Cristina, Audí, Laura, Carrascosa, Antonio, Fernández-Cancio, Mónica, Pérez-Arroyo, Annalisa, Ulied, Angels, Andaluz, Pilar, Arjona, Rosa, Albisu, Marian, Clemente, María, Gussinyé, Miquel, Yeste, Diego
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1859974/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17223997
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2265.2006.02718.x
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author Esteban, Cristina
Audí, Laura
Carrascosa, Antonio
Fernández-Cancio, Mónica
Pérez-Arroyo, Annalisa
Ulied, Angels
Andaluz, Pilar
Arjona, Rosa
Albisu, Marian
Clemente, María
Gussinyé, Miquel
Yeste, Diego
author_facet Esteban, Cristina
Audí, Laura
Carrascosa, Antonio
Fernández-Cancio, Mónica
Pérez-Arroyo, Annalisa
Ulied, Angels
Andaluz, Pilar
Arjona, Rosa
Albisu, Marian
Clemente, María
Gussinyé, Miquel
Yeste, Diego
author_sort Esteban, Cristina
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: GH1 gene presents a complex map of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the entire promoter, coding and noncoding regions. The aim of the study was to establish the complete map of GH1 gene SNPs in our control normal population and to analyse its association with adult height. DESIGN, SUBJECTS AND MEASUREMENTS: A systematic GH1 gene analysis was designed in a control population of 307 adults of both sexes with height normally distributed within normal range for the same population: −2 standard deviation scores (SDS) to +2 SDS. An analysis was performed on individual and combined genotype associations with adult height. RESULTS: Twenty-five SNPs presented a frequency over 1%: 11 in the promoter (P1 to P11), three in the 5′UTR region (P12 to P14), one in exon 1 (P15), three in intron 1 (P16 to P18), two in intron 2 (P19 and P20), two in exon 4 (P21 and P22) and three in intron 4 (P23 to P25). Twenty-nine additional changes with frequencies under 1% were found in 29 subjects. P8, P19, P20 and P25 had not been previously described. P6, P12, P17 and P25 accounted for 6·2% of the variation in adult height (P = 0·0007) in this population with genotypes A/G at P6, G/G at P6 and A/G at P12 decreasing height SDS (−0·063 ± 0·031, −0·693 ± 0·350 and −0·489 ± 0·265, Mean ± SE) and genotypes A/T at P17 and T/G at P25 increasing height SDS (+1·094 ± 0·456 and +1·184 ± 0·432). CONCLUSIONS: This study established the GH1 gene sequence variation map in a normal adult height control population confirming the high density of SNPs in a relatively small gene. Our study shows that the more frequent SNPs did not significantly contribute to height determination, while only one promoter and two intronic SNPs contributed significantly to it. Studies in larger populations will have to confirm the associations and in vitro functional studies will elucidate the mechanisms involved. Systematic GH1 gene analysis in patients with growth delay and suspected GH deficiency/insufficiency will clarify whether different SNP frequencies and/or the presence of different sequence changes may be associated with phenotypes in them.
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spelling pubmed-18599742007-05-03 Human growth hormone (GH1) gene polymorphism map in a normal-statured adult population Esteban, Cristina Audí, Laura Carrascosa, Antonio Fernández-Cancio, Mónica Pérez-Arroyo, Annalisa Ulied, Angels Andaluz, Pilar Arjona, Rosa Albisu, Marian Clemente, María Gussinyé, Miquel Yeste, Diego Clin Endocrinol (Oxf) Original Article OBJECTIVE: GH1 gene presents a complex map of single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in the entire promoter, coding and noncoding regions. The aim of the study was to establish the complete map of GH1 gene SNPs in our control normal population and to analyse its association with adult height. DESIGN, SUBJECTS AND MEASUREMENTS: A systematic GH1 gene analysis was designed in a control population of 307 adults of both sexes with height normally distributed within normal range for the same population: −2 standard deviation scores (SDS) to +2 SDS. An analysis was performed on individual and combined genotype associations with adult height. RESULTS: Twenty-five SNPs presented a frequency over 1%: 11 in the promoter (P1 to P11), three in the 5′UTR region (P12 to P14), one in exon 1 (P15), three in intron 1 (P16 to P18), two in intron 2 (P19 and P20), two in exon 4 (P21 and P22) and three in intron 4 (P23 to P25). Twenty-nine additional changes with frequencies under 1% were found in 29 subjects. P8, P19, P20 and P25 had not been previously described. P6, P12, P17 and P25 accounted for 6·2% of the variation in adult height (P = 0·0007) in this population with genotypes A/G at P6, G/G at P6 and A/G at P12 decreasing height SDS (−0·063 ± 0·031, −0·693 ± 0·350 and −0·489 ± 0·265, Mean ± SE) and genotypes A/T at P17 and T/G at P25 increasing height SDS (+1·094 ± 0·456 and +1·184 ± 0·432). CONCLUSIONS: This study established the GH1 gene sequence variation map in a normal adult height control population confirming the high density of SNPs in a relatively small gene. Our study shows that the more frequent SNPs did not significantly contribute to height determination, while only one promoter and two intronic SNPs contributed significantly to it. Studies in larger populations will have to confirm the associations and in vitro functional studies will elucidate the mechanisms involved. Systematic GH1 gene analysis in patients with growth delay and suspected GH deficiency/insufficiency will clarify whether different SNP frequencies and/or the presence of different sequence changes may be associated with phenotypes in them. Blackwell Publishing Ltd 2007-02-01 /pmc/articles/PMC1859974/ /pubmed/17223997 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2265.2006.02718.x Text en © 2006 The Authors Journal compilation © 2006 Blackwell Publishing Ltd https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ Re-use of this article is permitted in accordance with the Creative Commons Deed, Attribution 2·5, which does not permit commercial exploitation.
spellingShingle Original Article
Esteban, Cristina
Audí, Laura
Carrascosa, Antonio
Fernández-Cancio, Mónica
Pérez-Arroyo, Annalisa
Ulied, Angels
Andaluz, Pilar
Arjona, Rosa
Albisu, Marian
Clemente, María
Gussinyé, Miquel
Yeste, Diego
Human growth hormone (GH1) gene polymorphism map in a normal-statured adult population
title Human growth hormone (GH1) gene polymorphism map in a normal-statured adult population
title_full Human growth hormone (GH1) gene polymorphism map in a normal-statured adult population
title_fullStr Human growth hormone (GH1) gene polymorphism map in a normal-statured adult population
title_full_unstemmed Human growth hormone (GH1) gene polymorphism map in a normal-statured adult population
title_short Human growth hormone (GH1) gene polymorphism map in a normal-statured adult population
title_sort human growth hormone (gh1) gene polymorphism map in a normal-statured adult population
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1859974/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17223997
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-2265.2006.02718.x
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