| Literature DB >> 31796102 |
Alice Goldenberg1, Florent Marguet2, Vianney Gilard3, Aude-Marie Cardine4, Adnan Hassani5, François Doz6, Sophie Radi7, Stéphanie Vasseur1, Jacqueline Bou1, Maud Branchaud1, Claude Houdayer1, Stéphanie Baert-Desurmont1, Annie Laquerriere2, Thierry Frebourg8.
Abstract
The contribution of mosaic alterations to tumors of the nervous system and to non-malignant neurological diseases has been unmasked thanks to the development of Next Generation Sequencing (NGS) technologies. We report here the case of a young patient without any remarkable familial medical history who was first referred at 7 years of age, for an autism spectrum disorder (ASD) of Asperger type, not associated with macrocephaly. The patient subsequently presented at 10 years of age with multiple nodular lesions located within the trigeminal, facial and acoustic nerve ganglia and at the L3 level. Histological examination of this latter lesion revealed a glioneuronal hamartoma, exhibiting heterogeneous PTEN immunoreactivity, astrocyte and endothelial cell nuclei expressing PTEN, but not ganglion cells. NGS performed on the hamartoma allowed the detection of a PTEN pathogenic variant in 30% of the reads. The presence of this variant in the DNA extracted from blood and buccal swabs in 3.5 and 11% of the NGS reads, respectively, confirmed the mosaic state of the PTEN variant. The anatomical distribution of the lesions suggests that the mutational event affecting PTEN occurred in neural crest progenitors, thus explaining the absence of macrocephaly. This report shows that mosaic alteration of PTEN may result in multiple central and peripheral nervous system hamartomas and that the presence of such alteration should be considered in patients with multiple nervous system masses, even in the absence of cardinal features of PTEN hamartoma tumor syndrome, especially macrocephaly.Entities:
Keywords: Central nervous system; Hamartomas; Mosaics; Neural crest derivatives; PTEN
Year: 2019 PMID: 31796102 PMCID: PMC6892231 DOI: 10.1186/s40478-019-0841-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Acta Neuropathol Commun ISSN: 2051-5960 Impact factor: 7.801
Fig. 1Imaging characteristics of the brain and spinal lesions; pathological hallmarks of the spinal lesion. a-d, MRI of the case. Axial T2-weighted images show the well circumscribed lesion located within the cavernous sinus (a), at the level of the ganglion of the trigeminal nerve measuring 20 × 9 mm close to the not invaded internal carotid (red arrow) and associated with bilateral asymmetric lesions (b), measuring 14 × 12 mm in the interpedoncular fossa and 11 × 10 mm in the cerebellopontine angle within the ganglia of cranial nerves VII and VIII respectively (red arrows) and a nodule at the L3 level (c). T2 weighted axial plane of the cerebellum displaying exaggerated foliation of the right hemispheric cerebellar cortex (white arrow) located close to the vermis (d). e-h, histopathology of the resected L3 lesion. Histological view shows all but disorganized components of a spinal ganglion (e), including often dysmorphic ganglion cells (red arrow) and astrocytes (green arrow) lying in a fibrillar background [OM × 200]. Immunohistochemistry displays multiple GFAP positive astrocytes [OM × 200] (f), and numerous MAP2 positive ganglion cells [OM × 200] (g). PTEN immunolabeling reveals immunoreactive astrocytes (green arrow), endothelial (red arrow) and satellite cell nuclei, whereas positivity of ganglion cell (black arrow) nuclei is lost [OM × 100] (h). (OM: original magnification)