| Literature DB >> 21967607 |
Mi-Jung Kim1, Seon-Tae Kim, Hyoung-Doo Lee, Kyu-Yong Lee, Jiyoung Seo, Jae-Bom Lee, Young-Jae Lee, Suk P Oh.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia (HHT) is an autosomal-dominant vascular disorder, characterized by recurrent epistaxis, mucocutaneous telangiectases, and arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) in various visceral organs. Endoglin (ENG) and activin receptor-like kinase 1 (ACVRL1; ALK1), receptors for transforming growth factor-β (TGF-β) superfamily, have been identified as the principal HHT-causing genes.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21967607 PMCID: PMC3202234 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2350-12-130
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Genet ISSN: 1471-2350 Impact factor: 2.103
Clinical features and mutations of three HHT families
| Family | Patient | Gender/Age | Clinical features | Mutations |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| I-1 | M/46 | Epistaxis | ||
| I-2 | M/43 | Epistaxis, PAVM, Epilepsy, | ||
| I-3 | F/41 | Epistaxis, PAVM | ||
| I-4 | F/14 | Epistaxis, PAVM | ||
| I-5 | F/12 | Epistaxis | ||
| II-1 | F/82 | Epistaxis, | ||
| II-2 | M/65 | Epistaxis, CAVM | ||
| II-3 | M/53 | Epistaxis | ||
| II-4 | F/50 | Epistaxis | ||
| II-5 | M/13 | Epistaxis, CAVM, dead | n/d | |
| II-6 | M/18 | Epistaxis, PAVM, Seizure, | ||
| III-1 | M/55 | Epistaxis | ||
| III-2 | M/50 | Epistaxis | ||
| III-3 | F/40 | Epistaxis |
n/d: not determined
Figure 1Pedigree and genetic analysis of three HHT families. (A) Pedigree of families with genetic mutations and/or symptoms of HHT. Pedigree symbols: filled symbol, affected individual; open symbol, unaffected individual; divided symbol, affected individual by hearsay; gray symbol, no phenotypical and genetic data available. A slashed symbol indicates that the individual is deceased. Genetic analysis was performed on all individuals represented by filled and open symbols. Genetic mutations and HHT-associated symptoms of numbered patients are summarized in Table 1. (B) Genetic studies of three representative family members with HHT. Family 1, ENG c.360+1G > A (p.Gly74_Tyr120del); Family 2, ENG c.1-127 C > T (aberrant translation); Family 3, ACVRL1 c.252_253insC (p.Val85fsX168). The amino acid translation is shown above each codon. The amino acid sequence in Family 2 is the predicted sequence translated from the aberrant translation start codon. Arrows indicate mutation sites. SD, splicing donor sequence.
Figure 2Functionality of the aberrant translation start codon. (A) Schematic representation of the pENG-luc constructs. Wild-type (WT) ENG promoter produces ENG mRNA including the 413-nt-5'-UTR. pENG-luc(WT) was designed to code for luciferase mRNA containing the same ENG 5'-UTR under the control of the immediate early promoter of CMV (CMV-IE). In pENG-luc(M), the 'C' at position -127 in pENG-luc(WT) was replaced with 'T' (underlined), which generated the aberrant translation start codon. The substitution was found in the mutant allele of HHT patients in Family 2. The aberrant translation start codon putatively produces a 72-amino acid-protein out of frame with the luciferase coding sequence. In pENG-luc(M+1), a 'C' nucleotide (bold) was inserted between -41 and -40 of pENG-luc(M), thus producing an aberrant translation start codon that was in frame with the luciferase coding sequence. Nucleotides are numbered with c.1 corresponding to the 'A' of the ATG translation start codon in the reference sequence [GenBank:NM_000118.2]. (B) Bar graph illustrating the results of luciferase assays. HepG2 cells were transfected with pENG-luc plasmids [pENG-luc(WT), pENG-luc(M), or pENG-luc(M+1)] plus the β-galactosidase plasmid. Luciferase activity was normalized to β-galactosidase activity. The luciferase activity of pENG-luc(M) was significantly reduced compared to that of pENG-luc(WT). The activity was restored to levels even higher than WT levels in pENG-luc(M+1), which produced an in-frame luciferase fusion protein (44 aa-luciferase). Separate transfections were performed for each of three separate experiments (n = 9). Data represent mean ± SD. *p < .0001, as determined by Student's t test.
Figure 3Clinical features of an HHT patient (I-2). PAVM (arrows) and cerebral abscess (arrow head) are detected by chest computed tomography (CT) (A) and brain CT (B), respectively.
Figure 4Allele-specific expression analyses of the . (A) Restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis. (Left panel) F1 and R1 primers were used for amplification of the ENG genomic DNA. BtsCI, which recognizes the mutant allele, digested of 313 bp PCR product from the mutant allele into 216 bp and 97 bp fragments (arrowheads). The mutant allele-specific BtsCI-digested PCR products were detected in affected family member (Patient II-3) but not in an unaffected family member. (Right panel) F2 and R2 primers were used to amplify ENG transcripts from ENG cDNA generated by reverse transcriptase using ENG-specific R3 primer. BtsCI digestion of RT-PCR product amplified from mutant allele is supposed to yield 284 bp and 97 bp fragments if the mutant transcripts are stably present. Unlike genomic PCR products, BtsCI-digested PCR fragments from RT-PCR products of affected individuals were barely detectable (arrowheads). (B) Direct sequencing of the PCR products amplified from genomic DNA of a patient II-4 and cDNAs of an unaffected family member and three patients (II-2, II-3, II-4). The ENG c.1-127 positions were indicated by arrows. (C) Real-time RT-PCR analysis of ENG transcripts. Total RNAs isolated from the blood of three unaffected persons and three patients (II-2, II-3, II-4) were used for first-strand cDNA synthesis. Mean values of ENG ΔΔCt ratios and standard deviations are shown as filled box and bar above each box, respectively. The relative amount of ENG transcripts in each sample was normalized with the amount of Cyclophilin in the sample. * p < 0.01, compared with the unaffected samples, as determined by Student's t test.