Functional Characterization of Glucocorticoid Receptor Variants Is Required to Avoid Misinterpretation of NGS Data

2019 
Recent advances in genetic analysis technologies such as next-generation sequencing (NGS) have considerably increased the incidental discovery of genetic abnormalities. Six heterozygous missense mutations of the human glucocorticoid receptor (GR; encoded by the NR3C1 gene) have been identified in the context of genetic screening of endocrine pathologies. GR, a nuclear receptor, hormone-induced transcription factor, is involved in many physiological processes. Nevertheless, the pathogenic significance of incidentally discovered mutations remains obscure. The aim of this work was to characterize these variants by evaluating their functional impact on GR signaling. Six original GR variants, located in exon 2, led to amino acid substitutions of the N-terminal domain of GR (F65V, M86V, A229T, A304E, N374S, and R386Q), excluding mainly the activation function tau core 1 domain, the potential site of functional interaction with transcriptional coregulators. Transient cotransfection in HEK293T cells of mutated GR-expressing vectors and a luciferase reporter established dose-response curves for dexamethasone. This excluded any major transactivation abnormality of the mutated GRs (ligand concentration leading to 50% maximal transactivation capacity ≈ 0.2 nM), with maximal transactivation capacity identical to that of the wild-type (WT) GR and without modification of the potentiation of transcriptional coactivator steroid receptor coactivator 2 except in N374S. Moreover, protein expression of mutated GRs and their cytonuclear translocation studied by immunocytochemistry were almost unchanged compared with WT GR. These results underline the silent nature of these missense GR variants and call for cautious interpretation of the discovery of genetic incidentalomas by NGS in the absence of detailed characterization in order to appropriately assess their functional impact on a particular signaling pathway.
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