Glucocorticoid receptors (GRs) are vital transcription factors regulating stress responses, metabolism, and development. We report here a novel heterozygous NR3C1 c.1310C>T (p.T437I) variant within the GR DNA-binding domain found in a family exhibiting clinical and hormonal manifestations of partial glucocorticoid resistance. Patient-derived fibroblasts demonstrated an overall suppression in dexamethasone-induced transcription. To comprehensively assess the significance of the variant, we engineered a knock-in mouse model (Nr3c1+/T444I mice) using CRISPR-Cas9, providing an in vivo model of the patient-derived GR mutation at the orthologous residue. Heterozygous mice exhibited partial glucocorticoid resistance, dysregulated HPA axis activity and impaired dexamethasone suppression, closely recapitulating the patient phenotype. Homozygous Nr3c1T444I/T444I embryos were recovered at embryonic day 12.5 (E12.5) but did not survive to term, indicating mid-gestational lethality. Transcriptomic profiling of primary mouse embryonic fibroblasts revealed dosage-dependent effects with heterozygotes showing an intermediate response to dexamethasone compared to wild-type, while homozygotes showed a markedly blunted response. Our results challenge prior assumptions by demonstrating that GR DNA-binding is essential for embryogenesis, while offering a new preclinical platform to investigate glucocorticoid resistance pathophysiology and therapeutic interventions.
Mucin-type O-glycans regulate proteoglycan stability and chondrocyte maturation
O-glycosylation is a ubiquitous post-translational modification essential for protein stability, cell signaling, and tissue organization, yet how distinct O-glycan subclasses coordinate tissue development remains unclear.




