Literature DB >> 10702408

Endoglin expression is reduced in normal vessels but still detectable in arteriovenous malformations of patients with hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia type 1.

A Bourdeau1, U Cymerman, M E Paquet, W Meschino, W C McKinnon, A E Guttmacher, L Becker, M Letarte.   

Abstract

Endoglin is predominantly expressed on endothelium and is mutated in hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia (HHT) type 1 (HHT1). We report the analysis of endoglin in tissues of a newborn (family 2), who died of a cerebral arteriovenous malformation (CAVM), and in a lung specimen surgically resected from a 78-year-old patient (family 5), with a pulmonary AVM (PAVM). The clinically affected father of the newborn revealed a novel mutation that was absent in his parents and was identified as a duplication of exons 3 to 8, by quantitative multiplex polymerase chain reaction. The corresponding mutant protein (116-kd monomer) and the missense mutant protein (80-kd monomer) present in family 5 were detected only as transient intracellular species and were unreactive by Western blot analysis and immunostaining. Normal endoglin (90-kd monomer) was reduced by 50% on peripheral blood-activated monocytes of the HHT1 patients. When analyzed by immunostaining and densitometry, presumed normal blood vessels of the newborn lung and brain and vessels adjacent to the adult PAVM showed a 50% reduction in the endoglin/PECAM-1 ratio. A similar ratio was observed in the CAVM and PAVM, suggesting that all blood vessels of HHT1 patients express reduced endoglin in situ and that AVMs are not attributed to a focal loss of endoglin.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 10702408      PMCID: PMC1876827          DOI: 10.1016/S0002-9440(10)64960-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Am J Pathol        ISSN: 0002-9440            Impact factor:   4.307


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