Title: REI Genetics
1REI Genetics
2GENETICS IN REPRODUCTIVE ENDOCRINOLOGY AND
INFERTILITY
- When does an REI specialist use genetics?
- infertility work-up
- recurrent pregnancy loss
- ambiguous genitalia
- disorders of androgen excess, amenorrhea
- assisted reproduction
- preimplantation genetic diagnosis
3GENETIC BASIS OF NORMAL AND ABNORMAL MÃœLLERIAN
DEVELOPMENT
- mammalian sexual differentiation controlled by
- both genetic and hormonal influences
- human gonad is bipotential
4GENETIC BASIS OF NORMAL AND ABNORMAL MÃœLLERIAN
DEVELOPMENT
-
-
- testicular differentiation (TDF) ? testis
(facultative role) - Y MIH müllarian inhibiting
substance production - production of testosterone
conversion to
- dihydrotestosterone end organ androgen
receptors -
- SRY sex-determining region (short arm of Y)
- MIH müllerian inhibiting substance (Müllerian
duct regression, Wolfian duct differentiation) - TDF Testis-determining factor is a 35kilobase
pair (kbp) sequence on the SRY area of the
Y chromosome
5 6INFLUENCE of SRY GENE
- SRY gene directs a cascade of gene activation and
protein production - Â
- Absence of SRY human gonad becomes ovaryÂ
- Absence of testis -- internal external female
genitalia - Multiple autosomal genes also play a role in
- testicular differentiation
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10 - Phallus too large normal clitoris, too small for
a normal penis. The opening at the base of the
penis (urine exits) may be true urethra or
pseudourethra at apex of fused labia. May be
incompletely fused scrotum or fused labia. - Now what?
11NEONATE WITH AMBIGUOUS GENITALIA
- definitive assignment of sex should be withheld,
with reassurance - careful physical exam for palpable gonads,
phallus length, position of urethral meatus, is
there a vagina or vaginal pouch or urogenital
sinus, degree of labioscrotal fusion, any other
somatic abnormalities (mixed gonadal dysgenesis) - immediate labs serum electrolytes, 17a-OH
progesterone and karyotype - serum sample should be frozen for subsequent
analysis of steroid intermediates
12GENETIC BASIS OF AMBIGUOUS GENITALIA
- virilization of genetic females
- (female pseudohermaphroditism)
- undermasculinization of genetic males
- (male pseudohermaphroditism)
- true hermaphroditism
- (presence of both ovarian and testicular tissue)
13ANATOMY OF AMBIGUOUS GENITALIA
- b fused labia form pseudourethral opening and
cover both the true - urethra meatus and the vagina introitus. c
opening at the base of the - phallus is a urethra with hypospadias testis may
has descended ?partially - fused scrotum or remained in the abdominal cavity
or inguinal canal
14FEMALE PSEUDOHERMAPHRODITISM 46 (X,X)
- most common cause
- congenital adrenal hyperplasia
- vast majority is deficiency of 21-hydroxylase
- 11-hydroxylase and 3-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase
deficiency also occur
15VIRILIZATION IN CONGENITAL ADRENAL HYPERPLASIA
- A mild with minimal labial fusion B
intermediate - C most severe form with urethra opening at tip
of phallus
16Aromatase
17FEMALE PSEUDOHERMAPHRODITISM 46 (X,X)
- salt wasting form of 21-hydroxylase deficiency
- is life-threatening
- 11-hydroxylase deficiency presents with
hypertension - masculinization 2 elevated androgenic precursors
- produced by the adrenal gland
- rarely, exogenous source (meds) or maternal
theca-lutein cyst ? maternal/fetal virilization
18CONGENITAL ADRENAL HYPERPLASIA 21-hydroxylase
deficiency
- most common form of CAH
- AR inheritance, chromosome 6
- (most CAH)
- untreated adult female note short stature,
masculinized habitus, lack of female secondary
sexual development - tx exogenous cortisol, ex. hydrocortisone
10mg/day
19MALE PSEUDOHERMAPHRODITISM
- Genetic male 46 (X,Y) with inadequate production
of testosterone or - dihydrotestosterone or lack of androgen
responsiveness in target tissues - palpable gonad strongly suggests genetic male (Y
chrom.) or rarely, true hermaphrodite - ? 17a-hydroxylase ? hypertension, hypokalemia
- ? 5a-reductase ? AR condition, normal testes,
impaired conversion - to dihydrotestosterone ? severe external
genitalia ambiguity - labioscrotal fusion and a urogenital
sinus, severe hypospadia, - elevated TDHT levels, without
intervention, virilize at puberty - (raise female with early gonadectomy to
avoid virilization or male with amb. genitalia
virilizes intersex issues)
20MALE PSEUDOHERMAPHRODITISM
- androgen receptor gene mutation ? androgen
insensitivity syndrome - partial function leads to highly variable
external genitalia from phenotypic female to
phenotypic male
- mixed gonadal dysgenesis (45,X/46,XY) varying
degrees of genital ambiguity
21MALE PSEUDOHERMAPHRODITISMSwyer syndrome is
46,XY (female phenotype)
- may present as primary amenorrhea with elevated
gonadotropins - embryonic testicular regression, before or during
internal/external genital differentiation - timing of degen ?internal differentiation into
Wolfian vs Mullerian - usually infantile female phenotype
internal/external genitalia, streak gonads lack
of 2 sexual development - early gonadectomy
-
-
- (early gonadoblastoma occurance)
- usually raised as female, supplement estrogen/
progesterone to encourage female 2 sexual
development
22TRUE HERMAPHRODITISM
- most common 46,XX
- 10 46,XY
- rare 46,XY/46,XX
- (thought to be fusion of 46,XY and 46,XX embryos
into chimera) - any mixture of ovary, testis, and ovotestis
either unilateral or bilateral is possible, with
ovarian tissue more functional
23GENETIC BASIS OF DISORDERS OF MÃœLLARIAN
DEVELOPMENT
- presenting as gonadal dysgenesis
- primary amenorrhea
- delayed puberty
- primary or secondary amenorrhea
- (1-2 - consider with short stature)
- must exclude 45,X cell line because
- associated cardiac anomalies (40-50) and
- renal anomalies (30)
-  approx. ½ of woman with primary amenorrhea and
- hypergonadotropic hypogonadism have some
- X - chromosome abnormality
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26GENETIC CAUSES OF DELAYED PUBERTY
- Müllerian anomalies usually present during the
- adolescent years as primary amenorrhea.
- Genetic influence in
- ESTROGENIZED (eugonadal) müllerian aplasia vs.
AIS - NON-ESTROGENIZED HYPOGONADOTROPIN (low FSH/LH)
- Kallmans, Prader-Willi-Lambert,
Laurence-Moon-Biedl - NON-ESTROGENIZED HYPERGONADOTROPIN (high
FSH/LH) - Turners pure gonadal dysgenesis
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28ESTROGENIZED HYPOGONADOTROPIN (low FSH/LH)
- MÜLLERIAN APLASIA Mayer-Rokitansky-Küster-Haus
er - 46,XX with normal ovaries, tubes, uterine
remnants - fusion failure of müllarian anlagen during
development - absent vagina and uterus may have vaginal pouch
- examine for assc. skeletal abnormalities (11-50)
- usually clinical diagnosis
- abd/pelvic USG --gt midline uterine remnant
ovaries - r/o unilateral renal agenesis or single pelvic
kidney - serum testosterone normal female level
- pregnancy possible with oocyte retrieval and use
of gestational carrier (surrogate)
29MÃœLLERIAN AGENESIS
- Normal bladder and rectal anatomy. Space between
bladder and rectum usually occupied by Müllerian
structures made up of loose areolar tissue that
extends up to level of peritoneal reflection.
30ESTROGENIZED HYPOGONADOTROPIN (low FSH/LH)
-
- ANDROGEN INSENSITIVITY SYNDROME
- 46,XY female phenotype gene on Xq11-12
mutation of androgen receptor absence/scant pubic
hair, absent vagina or vaginal pouch, - XLR inheritance
- SRY ? normal testis development
- MIS ? absence of cervix/uterus and formation of
- blind vaginal pouch
- peripheral conversion of androgens ? estrogens ?
breasts - serum testosterone nearly normal male
31ESTROGENIZED HYPOGONADOTROPIN (low FSH/LH)
-
- ANDROGEN INSENSITIVITY
- SYNDROME
- recommended laparoscopic gonadectomy s/p breast
dev. - incomplete androgen insensitivity gives varying
range of - phenotype
- predominately female with some ambiguity of
external genitalia - predominately male with hypospadia, micropenis,
or only impaired spermatogenesis - when diagnosis made, investigate family members
apparent sisters 13 chance of 46,XY female
offspring of normal sister with 16 chance of
46,XY (require gonadectomy)
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33NON-ESTROGENIZED HYPOGONADOTROPIN (low FSH/LH)
- Laurence-Moon-Biedl Syndrome obesity, mental
- deficiency, poly and/or syndactyly, genital
hypo-plasia /or hypogonadism, retinitis
pigmentosa autosomal recessive
34 NON-ESTROGENIZED HYPOGONADOTROPIN (low
FSH/LH)
- Prader-Willi-Lambert hypotonia, dev. delay,
hyperphagia almond-shaped eyes - paternal chromosome 15 deletion (q11q13)
- example of genetic imprinting unequal
expression of
maternal and paternal alleles - Kallmans absence of GnRH producing neurons and
olfactory defect, hypogonadism, cryptorchidism,
/- assc. cleft lip/palate, /- cong. deafness - 3 modes of transmission (XLR, AD and AR)
- X-linked most common as evidenced by
- 5-7 x increased frequency in males
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36NON-ESTROGENIZED HYPERGONADOTROPIN (high
FSH/LH)
- Gonadal Dysgenesis
- spectrum of disorders with assc.
hypergonadotropic hypogonadism - present with delayed puberty, lack of 2 sexual
develop- - ment and primary or secondary amenorrhea
- Karyotypes range from 45,X or 46,X(delX) single
cell line to mosaic and structurally abn. X
chrom. - Less common apparently normal 46,XY or 46,XX
37NON-ESTROGENIZED HYPERGONADOTROPIN (high
FSH/LH) TURNERS SYNDROME
38Turners Syndrome pure gonadal
dysgenesis
- Short stature, sexual infantilism, webbed neck,
streak gonads - Visceral anomalies coarctation of aorta,
bicuspid aortic valves, and horseshoe kidney - cystic hygroma or hand/feet lymphedema
- fewer than 3 of 45,X ? viable infant
- (most frequent karyotype in 1st trimester SAB)
- of viable female, 1/3 with single 45,X cell
line - majority exhibit chromosomal mosaicism (45,X )
- or structural abn. of X chromosome
- 45,X/46,XY mosiac to mixed gonadal dysgenesis
- adrenal androgens ?nl adrenarche but infantile
breast dev. - require estrogen replacement therapy /- GRH to
maximize height
39NOONANs SYNDROME
- affects males females with normal chromosomes
and normal gonad function - female phenotype Turners-like with different
cardiac malformations (pulmonary stenosis vs.
aortic coarctation) - male phenotype male Turners
- AD with variable expression
40 GENETIC BASIS OF REPETITIVE PREGNANCY LOSS
- traditional definition 3 or more consecutive
spontaneous pregnancy losses - recent studies show 2 losses with similar risk
pattern for future spontaneous ABs (recurrence
risk age dpdt. and increases with age) - RPL effects 1-2 reproductive age women
- structural abnormalities in parental chromosomes
occur in 3-5 couples with RPL. Most common
balanced trans-location (in female 2-31). Also
robertsonian translocation and supernumerary
chromosomes. Management includes prenatal
diagnosis with amnio/CVS, donor gametes, PGD.
41PREIMPLANTATION GENETIC DIAGNOSIS
- the future is here
- complete mapping of the human genome (draft 1999)
- specific genetic alterations associated with an
increasing number of inherited diseases, both
rare and common, are being classified - biomedical advances allow for increased access to
preimplantation genetic diagnosis - Â Wilkins-Haug L, et al. Genetics in
Obstetricians' Offices A Survey Study. Obstet
Gyn - 199993(5)642-647
42PRINCIPLES OF PREIMPLANTATION GENETIC DIAGNOSIS
- PGD requires patients to undergo IVF in order to
have pre-embryos available for testing (oocyte
retrieval insemination) - prior to transfer, one or two cells called
blastomeres are safely removed - chromosome analysis via PGD-FISH (flourescent in
situ hybrid-ization) - specific gene analysis via PGD-PCR (polymerase
chain reaction)
43PRINCIPLES OF PREIMPLANTATION GENETIC DIAGNOSIS
- In AMA, ability to become pregnant is unaffected,
but oocyte quality is compromised. Decreased
implantation rate hypothesized to reflect
increased aneuploidy in oocytes. - PGD for aneuploidy at with 8 chromosomes yielded
- increased implantation
- reduced spontaneous abortion
- decreased trisomic conception
- Preimplantation Genetic Diagnosis of Numerical
and Structural Chromosome Abnormalities, Munne S,
2002
44PRINCIPLES OF PREIMPLANTATION GENETIC DIAGNOSIS
- PGD is accurate and safe, with no deleterious
pre- or post-implantation developmental effects
(1000 cycles) - evaluation of single gene defects
- application for any genetic disease presently
diagnosed by prenatal diagnosis - future application for late onset and complex
disorders - Preimplantation Diagnosis for Single Gene
Defects, Verlinsky Y, Rechitsky S, Kuliev A, 2002
45REFERENCES
- Precis Reproductive Endocrinology, 2nd Ed. 2002
- Clinical Gynecologic Endocrinology and
Infertility, 6th Ed. Speroff L, et al. - Infertility, Contraception Reproductive
Endocrinology, 2nd Ed. Mishell D, Davanaj V - ACOG Technical Assessment, Genetics and Molecular
Diagnostic Testing, - Number 1, July 2002
- Genetics In Obstetrics Gynecology, 2nd Ed.,
Simpson J, Golbus, M - Textbook of Reproductive Medicine, Carr B,
Blackwell R, 1993 - Advances in Infertility Treatment, 2002
Conference, Filicori M
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