CBG Montevideo: A Clinically Novel SERPINA6 Mutation Leading to Haploinsufficiency of Corticosteroid-binding Globulin

J Endocr Soc. 2021 Jun 22;5(9):bvab115. doi: 10.1210/jendso/bvab115. eCollection 2021 Sep 1.

Abstract

Corticosteroid-binding globulin (CBG) is the main transport protein for cortisol, binding up to 90% in a 1:1 ratio. CBG provides transport of cortisol within the circulation and targeted cortisol tissue delivery. Here, we describe the clinically novel "CBG Montevideo" a SERPINA6 pathogenic variant that results in a 50% reduction in plasma CBG levels. This was associated with low serum total cortisol and clinical features of hypoglycemia, exercise intolerance, chronic fatigue, and hypotension in the proband, a 7-year-old boy, and his affected mother. Previous reports of 9 human CBG genetic variants affecting either CBG concentrations or reduced CBG-cortisol binding properties have outlined symptoms consistent with attenuated features of hypocortisolism, fatigue, and hypotension. Here, however, the presence of hypoglycemia, despite normal circulating free cortisol, suggests a specific role for CBG in effecting glucocorticoid function, perhaps involving cortisol-mediated hepatic glucose homeostasis and cortisol-brain communication.

Keywords: SERPIN A6; corticosteroid binding globulin; cortisol deficiency; haploinsufficiency.

Publication types

  • Case Reports