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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

A homozygous splice site mutation affecting the intracellular domain of the growth hormone (GH) receptor resulting in Laron syndrome with elevated GH-binding protein.

TLDR
It is predicted that this mutant GHR protein would not be anchored in the cell membrane and would be measurable in the circulation as GHBP, hence explaining the phenotype of severe GH resistance combined with elevated circulating GHBP.
Abstract
Laron syndrome (LS) is a severe autosomal recessive form of GH resistance resulting from molecular defects in the GH receptor (GHR). Affected individuals have extreme short stature and a typical facial phenotype. The point mutations in the GHR gene identified in this condition have until now been confined to the region encoding the extracellular domain of the receptor. We report here the first homozygous point mutation within the intracellular domain of the GHR in two LS cousins distinguishable from classical LS patients only by the presence of elevated GH-binding protein (GHBP) in their serum. A G to C transversion at the vital - 1 position in the splice donor site of exon 8 disrupts normal splicing, resulting in the complete skipping of exon 8, producing a mutant GHR protein lacking transmembrane and intracellular domains. We predict that this mutant protein would not be anchored in the cell membrane and would be measurable in the circulation as GHBP, hence explaining the phenotype of severe GH resistan...

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

A mammalian model for Laron syndrome produced by targeted disruption of the mouse growth hormone receptor/binding protein gene (the Laron mouse)

TL;DR: The findings indicate that the G HR/BP-deficient mouse (Laron mouse) is a suitable model for human Laron syndrome that will prove useful for the elucidation of many aspects of GHR/BP function that cannot be obtained in humans.
Journal ArticleDOI

Growth hormone insensitivity associated with a STAT5b mutation.

TL;DR: This report documents that the syndrome of growth hormone insensitivity in a teenage girl was due to a homozygous missense mutation in the gene for STAT5b, an essential component of the actions of growth hormones, as well as many other cytokine-induced functions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Laron syndrome (primary growth hormone resistance or insensitivity): The personal experience 1958-2003

TL;DR: This review presents the personal experience gained from the study follow-up and treatment of the 60 patients followed up for many years in the Israeli cohort and shows the GH-independent IGF-I effects.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evidence for a continuum of genetic, phenotypic, and biochemical abnormalities in children with growth hormone insensitivity.

TL;DR: An overall view of genotype and phenotype relationships is presented, together with an updated approach to the assessment of the patient with GHI, focusing on investigation of the GH-IGF-I axis and relevant molecular studies contributing to this diagnosis.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Ligand: a versatile computerized approach for characterization of ligand-binding systems.

TL;DR: This approach provides two major advantages compared with other available methods: it uses an exact mathematical model of the ligand-binding system, thereby avoiding the possible biases introduced by several commonly used approximations and it uses a statistically valid, appropriately weighted least-squares curve-fitting algorithm with objective measurement of goodness of fit.
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RNA splice junctions of different classes of eukaryotes: sequence statistics and functional implications in gene expression.

TL;DR: A striking similarity among the rare splice junctions which do not contain AG at the 3' splice site or GT at the 5'splice site indicates the existence of special mechanisms to recognize them, and that these unique signals may be involved in crucial gene-regulation events and in differentiation.
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Structural design and molecular evolution of a cytokine receptor superfamily.

TL;DR: This work proposes that the approximately 200-residue binding segment of the canonical cytokine receptor is composed of two discrete folding domains that share a significant sequence and structural resemblance with a likely binding site for cytokine ligands.
Journal ArticleDOI

Growth hormone receptor and serum binding protein: purification, cloning and expression

TL;DR: The complete amino-acid sequences derived from complementary DNA clones encoding the putative human and rabbit growth hormone receptors are not similar to other known proteins, demonstrating a new class of transmembrane receptors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Characterization of the human growth hormone receptor gene and demonstration of a partial gene deletion in two patients with Laron-type dwarfism.

TL;DR: Characterization of the growth hormone receptor gene from nine patients with Laron-type dwarfism shows that two individuals have a deletion of a large portion of the extracellular, hormone binding domain of the receptor gene.
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