Glucocorticosteroid Resistance in Humans. Elucidation of the Molecular Mechanisms and Implications for Pathophysiology
- 1 November 1994
- journal article
- case report
- Published by Wiley in Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 746 (1) , 362-374
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1749-6632.1994.tb39257.x
Abstract
Familial glucocorticoid resistance (FGR) is a rare hereditary disorder characterized by hypercortisolism and the absence of stigmata of Cushing's syndrome. The inability of glucocorticoids to exert their effects on target tissues is compensated for by increases in circulating corticotropin (ACTH) and cortisol, the former causing excess secretion of both adrenal androgens and adrenal steroid-biosynthesis intermediates with salt-retaining activity. There is considerable variability in the clinical presentations of FGR ranging from asymptomatic, to isolated chronic fatigue and to hypertension with or without hypokalemic alkalosis or to hyperandrogenism, or both. In women, hyperandrogenism can result in acne, hirsutism, menstrual irregularities, oligoanovulation, and infertility; in men it may lead to infertility and in children to precocious puberty. The reported molecular defects in FGR, such as point mutations and a microdeletion of the glucocorticoid receptor (GR) gene, cause partial resistance by, respectively, compromising the function of the GR or decreasing its intracellular concentration in glucocorticoid target tissues. Complete glucocorticoid resistance is believed to be incompatible with life in humans. Hence, the glucocorticoid resistance cases reported have been partial and of variable degree. The extreme variability in the clinical manifestations of the disorder can, additionally, be explained by differing sensitivity of target tissues to mineralocorticoids or androgens or both, and perhaps by different biochemical defects of the glucocorticoid receptor, causing selective resistance of certain glucocorticoid responses in specific tissues. Isolated tissue-resistance from a somatic mutation of the GR in a corticotropinoma from a patient with Nelson's syndrome was also found, suggesting that this may be a mechanism of tumorigenesis. There is additional evidence that defects of GR function can appear surreptitiously in a variety of clinical conditions, suggesting that glucocorticoid resistance in humans may be involved in the pathogenesis and/or clinical picture of a plethora of disease states, of which FGR is the archetype.Keywords
This publication has 44 references indexed in Scilit:
- A mutation of the glucocorticoid receptor in primary cortisol resistance.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1993
- Structure of the POMC Promoter Region in Pituitary and Extrapituitary ACTH Producing TumorsExperimental and Clinical Endocrinology & Diabetes, 1993
- Homodimer formation is rate-limiting for high affinity DNA binding by glucocorticoid receptorMolecular Endocrinology, 1992
- Mutations in Collagen Genes as a Cause of Connective-Tissue DiseasesNew England Journal of Medicine, 1992
- Nuclear import-export: In search of signals and mechanismsCell, 1991
- Functional antagonism between oncoprotein c-Jun and the glucocorticoid receptorCell, 1990
- A dynamic model of glucocorticoid receptor phosphorylation and cycling in intact cellsJournal of Steroid Biochemistry, 1989
- Genetics of glucocorticoid receptorsMolecular and Cellular Endocrinology, 1986
- Primary cortisol resistance associated with a thermolabile glucocorticoid receptor in a patient with fatigue as the only symptom.Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1986
- Haemophilia B caused by a point mutation in a donor splice junction of the human factor IX geneNature, 1985