Regulation of steroidogenesis in a primary pigmented nodular adrenocortical disease-associated adenoma leading to virilization and subclinical Cushing's syndrome

J Hofland, WW de Herder, L Derks… - European journal of …, 2013 - academic.oup.com
J Hofland, WW de Herder, L Derks, LJ Hofland, PM van Koetsveld, RR de Krijger
European journal of endocrinology, 2013academic.oup.com
Context Primary pigmented nodular adrenocortical disease (PPNAD) can lead to steroid
hormone overproduction. Mutations in the cAMP protein kinase A regulatory subunit type 1A
(PRKAR1A) are causative of PPNAD. Steroidogenesis in PPNAD can be modified through a
local glucocorticoid feed-forward loop. Objective Investigation of regulation of
steroidogenesis in a case of PPNAD with virilization. Materials and methods A 33-year-old
woman presented with primary infertility due to hyperandrogenism. Elevated levels of …
Context
Primary pigmented nodular adrenocortical disease (PPNAD) can lead to steroid hormone overproduction. Mutations in the cAMP protein kinase A regulatory subunit type 1A (PRKAR1A) are causative of PPNAD. Steroidogenesis in PPNAD can be modified through a local glucocorticoid feed-forward loop.
Objective
Investigation of regulation of steroidogenesis in a case of PPNAD with virilization.
Materials and methods
A 33-year-old woman presented with primary infertility due to hyperandrogenism. Elevated levels of testosterone and subclinical ACTH-independent Cushing's syndrome led to the discovery of an adrenal tumor, which was diagnosed as PPNAD. In vivo evaluation of aberrantly expressed hormone receptors showed no steroid response to known stimuli. Genetic analysis revealed a PRKAR1A protein-truncating Q28X mutation. After adrenalectomy, steroid levels normalized. Tumor cells were cultured and steroidogenic responses to ACTH and dexamethasone were measured and compared with those in normal adrenal and adrenocortical carcinoma cells. Expression levels of 17β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase (17β-HSD) types 3 and 5 and steroid receptors were quantified in PPNAD, normal adrenal, and adrenal adenoma tissues.
Results
Isolated PPNAD cells, analogous to normal adrenal cells, showed both increased steroidogenic enzyme expression and steroid secretion in response to ACTH. Dexamethasone did not affect steroid production in the investigated types of adrenal cells. 17β-HSD type 5 was expressed at a higher level in the PPNAD-associated adenoma compared with control adrenal tissue.
Conclusion
PPNAD-associated adenomas can cause virilization and infertility by adrenal androgen overproduction. This may be due to steroidogenic control mechanisms that differ from those described for PPNAD without large adenomas.
Oxford University Press