| Literature DB >> 31446422 |
Matthias Rath1,2, Axel Pagenstecher3, Alexander Hoischen4, Ute Felbor5,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cerebral cavernous malformations (CCMs) can cause severe neurological morbidity but our understanding of the mechanisms that drive CCM formation and growth is still incomplete. Recent experimental data suggest that dysfunctional CCM3-deficient endothelial cell clones form cavernous lesions in conjunction with normal endothelial cells.Entities:
Keywords: cerebral cavernous malformations; late postzygotic mutation; postzygotic mosaicism; smmips; two-hit model of knudson
Year: 2019 PMID: 31446422 PMCID: PMC7042965 DOI: 10.1136/jmedgenet-2019-106182
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Genet ISSN: 0022-2593 Impact factor: 6.318
Novel and reported late postzygotic CCM1, CCM2 or CCM3 loss-of-function variants in CCM tissues
| Reference | Gene | Constitutional or high-frequency variant identified in blood and/or CCM tissue* | Late postzygotic variant* | Frequency of the late postzygotic variant (%) | Familial/sporadic CCM | ||
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| c.1363C>T, p.(Gln455*) | Exon 14 | c.1465_1498del, p.(Glu489Lysfs*9) | Exon 15§ | 0–21 | Familial |
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| c.1363C>T, p.(Gln455*) | Exon 14 | c.1300del, p.(Val434Leufs*3) | Exon 14§ | 0–4.3 | Sporadic |
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| c.1363C>T, p.(Gln455*) | Exon 14 | c.1271_1274del, p.(Ile424Thrfs*12) | Exon 14§ | 11–25 | Unknown |
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| c.1363C>T, p.(Gln455*) | Exon 14 | c.1003G>T, p.(Glu335*) | Exon 12§ | 4–6 | Unknown |
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| Deletion of exons 2–10 | Exons 2–10 | c.55C>T, p.(Arg19*) | Exon 2§ | 6.3–27.5 | Familial |
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| c.474+1G>A, p.? | Intron 7 | c.211dup, p.(Ser71Lysfs*5)‡ | Exon 5§ | 4.5–10.2 | Familial |
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| c.213_214delinsAT, p.(Tyr71*) | Exon 6 | c.1890G>A, p.(Trp630*) | Exon 18 | 0–5.3 | Sporadic |
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| None | – | c.993T>G, p.(Tyr331*) | Exon 12§ | 3.1–7.2 | Sporadic |
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| None | – | c.1659_1688delinsTAAGCTGATAACATAGTCTG, | Exon 16 | 0.4–11.9 | Sporadic |
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| None | – | Loss of heterozygosity in a 12–18 kb region | – | – | Sporadic |
Reference sequences: CCM1: LRG_650t1; CCM2: LRG_664t2; CCM3: LRG_651t1, transcript-specific exon and intron numbering (LRG_650t1 with exons 1–20, LRG_664t2 with exons 1–10, LRG_651t1 with exons 1–9).
*Variants are described according to the recommendations of the Human Genome Variation Society (HGVS).
†Constitutional mutation of the index case first reported in Stahl et al.18
‡The postzygotic variant was also detected in an independent tissue sample of a regrown CCM of the index patient.11
§In trans configuration was verified by sequencing of genomic DNA (rather short distance between the two variants) or by cDNA analysis (availability of high-quality RNA samples).
¶An immunohistochemical approach was used to demonstrate endothelial CCM1 inactivation on protein level. Postzygotic inframe and missense variants are listed in online supplementary table 1.
CCM, cerebral cavernous malformation.
Figure 1Late postzygotic CCM1 nonsense variant and endothelial cell mosaicism within the cerebral cavernous malformation tissue from a proband with a de novo CCM1 germline mutation. (A) Genomic target regions were enriched and amplified using the smMIP technology. Hybridisation of smMIPs targeting each DNA strand, gap fill, ligation and binding sites for PCR primers are schematically depicted. Molecular tag sequences are marked in green. (B, C) Next generation sequencing analyses verified the heterozygous CCM1 germline mutation (B) and identified a postzygotic CCM1 nonsense variant (C). Endothelia of caverns presented with scattered immunopositivity and immunonegativity for CCM1 (D, arrows indicate negative and asterisks positive immunostaining), while CCM2 (E) and CCM3 (F) were uniformly present in serial sections. (G) Model of clonal evolution of an EC that acquired a second postzygotic mutation (CCM1) and incorporation of ECs with an intact CCM allele (CCM1) into the growing CCM. CCM, cerebral cavernous malformation; ECs, endothelial cells; smMIP, single-molecule molecular inversion probe.