Endocrine and Metabolic Science (Dec 2021)

Hypoparathyroidism Associated with the DNA Variants in Non-Coding Sequence Region of Calcium-Sensing Receptor

  • Qiang Zhang,
  • Li-Jie Zhang,
  • Sha-Sha Yuan,
  • Xiao-Jiang Quan,
  • Bao-Yu Zhang,
  • Dong Zhao

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5
p. 100106

Abstract

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A stable narrow range of extracellular calcium concentration in the blood is essential for life. The calcium-sensing receptor (CaSR), a member of the G protein-coupled receptors family, is required to adjust the set point of blood extracellular calcium concentration, thus regulate parathyroid hormone (PTH) secretion and renal calcium excretion. Loss or gain function of CaSR mutations may result in either hyper- or hypocalcaemia. The CaSR activating mutations increase its sensitivity to extracellular ionized calcium (Ca2+). As consequence, PTH synthesis and secretion are suppressed continuously at normal ionized calcium concentrations. Patients display hypocalcaemia, hyperphosphatemia and lower levels of PTH. Urinary calcium excretion is increased due to the decreased circulating inappropriately PTH level and the activation of the renal tubular CaSR. Therefore, CaSR becomes a good potential clinical therapeutic target for hypoparathyroidism treatment. In order to define new drugs and improve medical management of hypoparathyroidism patients, this study attempts to identify new CaSR variants and analyse in detail the functional change of these CaSR variants, thus better understand the molecular mechanism involved. The study is based on collected hypoparathyroidism patients in our clinical site. In the study we enrolled in 10 patients, obtained all their clinical results and DNA results from seven patients. Our results indicated that the effect of serum intact PTH level correlated to change of serum Ca2+ and phosphate level. The CaSR carrying newly identified DNA variants displayed strong phosphorylation of phospholipase C and mitogen-activated protein kinases. Although the size of clinical cases need to be accumulated, current cases have showed a tendency that the identified multiple DNA variants in CaSR gene revealed an effect on the diagnostic criterion of the hypocalcaemic syndrome. It is undeniable that our research has certain limitations. So far, we tested several DNA variants at the same time, further functional examination for individual DNA variant would largely help to be better understand the mechanisms of CaSR regulation on extracellular calcium concentration.

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