| Literature DB >> 27476657 |
Arda Cetinkaya1, Jingwei Rachel Xiong2, İbrahim Vargel3, Kemal Kösemehmetoğlu4, Halil İbrahim Canter5, Ömer Faruk Gerdan6, Nicola Longo7, Ahmad Alzahrani8, Mireia Perez Camps2, Ekim Zihni Taskiran1, Simone Laupheimer2, Lorenzo D Botto7, Eeswari Paramalingam2, Zeliha Gormez6, Elif Uz9, Bayram Yuksel10, Şevket Ruacan11, Mahmut Şamil Sağıroğlu6, Tokiharu Takahashi12, Bruno Reversade13, Nurten Ayse Akarsu14.
Abstract
Vascular malformations are non-neoplastic expansions of blood vessels that arise due to errors during angiogenesis. They are a heterogeneous group of sporadic or inherited vascular disorders characterized by localized lesions of arteriovenous, capillary, or lymphatic origin. Vascular malformations that occur inside bone tissue are rare. Herein, we report loss-of-function mutations in ELMO2 (which translates extracellular signals into cellular movements) that are causative for autosomal-recessive intraosseous vascular malformation (VMOS) in five different families. Individuals with VMOS suffer from life-threatening progressive expansion of the jaw, craniofacial, and other intramembranous bones caused by malformed blood vessels that lack a mature vascular smooth muscle layer. Analysis of primary fibroblasts from an affected individual showed that absence of ELMO2 correlated with a significant downregulation of binding partner DOCK1, resulting in deficient RAC1-dependent cell migration. Unexpectedly, elmo2-knockout zebrafish appeared phenotypically normal, suggesting that there might be human-specific ELMO2 requirements in bone vasculature homeostasis or genetic compensation by related genes. Comparative phylogenetic analysis indicated that elmo2 originated upon the appearance of intramembranous bones and the jaw in ancestral vertebrates, implying that elmo2 might have been involved in the evolution of these novel traits. The present findings highlight the necessity of ELMO2 for maintaining vascular integrity, specifically in intramembranous bones.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27476657 PMCID: PMC4974086 DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2016.06.008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Hum Genet ISSN: 0002-9297 Impact factor: 11.025