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Clinical Studies |
Departments of Pediatrics (L.B., A.S., E.P., M.E., W.C.) and Neurology (R.B., S.S.), University of Miami School of Medicine, Miami, Florida 33136; Research Atlantica, Inc. (J.D.), Coral Springs, Florida 33065; and the Department of Pediatrics, Emory University School of Medicine (M.R.B., J.S.P.), Atlanta, Georgia 30322
Address all correspondence and requests for reprints to: Lisa L. Baumbach, Ph.D., Room 6021, Mailman Center for Child Development, University of Miami School of Medicine, 1601 NW 12th Avenue, Miami, Florida 33136.
We have characterized the GH receptor mutation that is responsible for extreme short stature and GH insensitivity in a Bahamian genetic isolate. Heights of affected individuals ranged from -4.0 to -6.3 SD. Like others with Larons syndrome, they had normal to high serum GH concentrations and low serum insulin-like growth factor I concentrations. Circulating levels of GH-binding protein activity were below limits of detection. Amplification of exons 27 and screening with single strand conformational polymorphism analysis located an abnormality in exon 7. Sequencing identified homozygosity for a C to T transition in the third position of codon 236. Reverse transcription and PCR amplification of complementary DNA from lymphocytes showed that this same sense mutation generated a new splice donor site 63 bp 5' to the normal exon 7 splice site. This novel site was used to the exclusion of the normal site in homozygotes. Both normal and variant messenger ribonucleic acid species were detected in heterozygotes. The predicted protein lacks 21 amino acids, including those defining the WS-like motif of the GH receptor extracellular domain. The high frequency of Larons syndrome in this isolated island population probably reflects the introduction of the G236 splice mutation by a settler early in the 300-yr history of English settlement.
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