| Literature DB >> 34124757 |
Roar Fjær1,2,3, Katarzyna Marciniak4,5, Olav Sundnes4,5,6, Hanne Hjorthaug1, Ying Sheng1, Clara Hammarström4,5, Jan Cezary Sitek6, Magnus Dehli Vigeland1, Paul Hoff Backe3,7,8, Ane-Marte Øye1, Johanna Hol Fosse4,5, Tor Espen Stav-Noraas4, Yuri Uchiyama9,10, Naomichi Matsumoto9, Anne Comi11,12,13, Jonathan Pevsner11,14, Guttorm Haraldsen4,5, Kaja Kristine Selmer1,15,16.
Abstract
Sturge-Weber syndrome (SWS) is a neurocutaneous disorder characterized by vascular malformations affecting skin, eyes and leptomeninges of the brain, which can lead to glaucoma, seizures and intellectual disability. The discovery of a disease-causing somatic missense mutation in the GNAQ gene, encoding an alpha chain of heterotrimeric G-proteins, has initiated efforts to understand how G-proteins contribute to SWS pathogenesis. The mutation is predominantly detected in endothelial cells and is currently believed to affect downstream MAPK signalling. In this study of six Norwegian patients with classical SWS, we aimed to identify somatic mutations through deep sequencing of DNA from skin biopsies. Surprisingly, one patient was negative for the GNAQ mutation, but instead harbored a somatic mutation in GNB2 (NM_005273.3:c.232A>G, p.Lys78Glu), which encodes a beta chain of the same G-protein complex. The positions of the mutant amino acids in the G-protein are essential for complex reassembly. Therefore, failure of reassembly and continuous signalling is a likely consequence of both mutations. Ectopic expression of mutant proteins in endothelial cells revealed that expression of either mutant reduced cellular proliferation, yet regulated MAPK signalling differently, suggesting that dysregulated MAPK signalling cannot fully explain the SWS phenotype. Instead, both mutants reduced synthesis of Yes-associated protein (YAP), a transcriptional co-activator of the Hippo signalling pathway, suggesting a key role for this pathway in the vascular pathogenesis of SWS. The discovery of the GNB2 mutation sheds novel light on the pathogenesis of SWS and suggests that future research on targets of treatment should be directed towards the YAP, rather than the MAPK, signalling pathway.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34124757 PMCID: PMC8522634 DOI: 10.1093/hmg/ddab144
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Hum Mol Genet ISSN: 0964-6906 Impact factor: 6.150
Clinical characteristics of patients, and locations of biopsies
| Patient | Age | Skin lesions | Cognitive function | Epilepsy onset (seizure type) | Epilepsy status (ASM) | MRI findings | Eye affection | Lesional biopsy | Non-lesional biopsy |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 25 | Unilateral left brow | Normal, but | 7 months (focal seizures) | Medically controlled (lamotrigine) | Slight atrophy in the posterior left parietal lobe and occipital lobe. T2-weighted MRI with low signal representing calcification in the same localization. Enlarged deep draining veins left side | No | Below hairline, left brow | Medial left upper arm |
| 2 | 27 | Face and extremities right side, scattered changes in right hemithorax | Mild intellectual disability | 1 year (bilateral | Medically controlled (carbamazepine) | Right-sided atrophy, dark subcortical deposits representing calcifications (non-contrast MRI) increased soft tissue volume face and orbitae | Glaucoma | Right upper arm | Unaffected area of |
| 3 | 22 | Unilateral left eyelid, nose and brow | Mild intellectual disability | Not known | Refractory (oxcarbazepine) | Left-sided leptomeningeal vascular malformation and atrophy | No | Below hairline, | Medial left |
| 4 | 12 | Right brow and eyelid | Normal | 3 months | Undergone resective epilepsy surgery, some focal seizures with impairment of consciousness (carbamazepine) | Right-sided frontoparietal leptomeningeal vascular malformation. Slight atrophy of right hemisphere (presurgical MRI) | No | Below hairline, | Medial left |
| 5 | 21 | Face upper right side, scattered changes | Moderate | 3 months (focal seizures with generalization) | Not known | Not known | Glaucoma | Right scapular | Left scapular |
| 6 | 60 | Left side of face, scattered trunk and limbs lesions | Normal | 40 years (focal seizures) | Intermittent focal seizures (4/year), unmedicated | Left parieto-occipital vascular malformation with slight atrophy. Age-related changes | Congenital | Left of sternum | Medial right |
ASM, anti-seizure medication, MRI, magnetic resonance imaging.
Figure 1
Clinical features of patient 3. (A) Childhood image of the patient displaying a port-wine lesion affecting her left eyelid and brow. (B) Contrast-enhanced MRI shows left-sided enhancement in leptomeningeal vascular malformation and atrophy. (C) Non-contrast-enhanced CT shows gyral calcifications and atrophy.
Synopsis of pertinent MiSeq sequencing of GNAQ:c.548G>A results from all affected samples
| Patient | Sample | Mutation frequency (%) | Depth | G (ref) | A (mut) | T | C |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Endothelial cell culture | 14.36 | 130 299 | 111 585 | 18 709 | 4 | 1 |
| 2 | Dermis | 7.08 | 128 341 | 119 233 | 9091 | 16 | 1 |
| Endothelial cell culture | 9.28 | 100 355 | 91 036 | 9314 | 5 | 0 | |
| LCM endothelium | 29.88 | 60 684 | 42 552 | 18 131 | 1 | 0 | |
| 3 | Endothelial cell culture | 0.01 | 99 182 | 99 159 | 14 | 6 | 3 |
| Dermis | 0.01 | 131 325 | 131 300 | 16 | 8 | 1 | |
| 4 | Dermis | 7.39 | 135 365 | 125 357 | 9998 | 8 | 2 |
| Endothelial cell culture 1 | 0.24 | 113 991 | 113 714 | 269 | 5 | 3 | |
| Endothelial cell culture 2 | 0.13 | 143 019 | 142 825 | 189 | 4 | 1 | |
| 5 | Dermis | 8.98 | 147 823 | 134 533 | 13 276 | 12 | 2 |
| 6 | Dermis | 5.72 | 99 490 | 93 794 | 5694 | 0 | 2 |
| LCM endothelium | 19.93 | 192 942 | 154 496 | 38 444 | 0 | 2 |
ref, reference allele; mut, mutation, LCM, laser capture microdissection.
MiSeq results of GNB2:c.232A>G in samples from patient 3
| Patient 3 | Mutation frequency (%) | Depth | A (ref) | G (mut) | T | C |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Affected dermis | 3.59 | 91 041 | 87 769 | 3265 | 7 | 0 |
| Affected endothelial cell culture | 20.74 | 71 630 | 56 771 | 14 858 | 1 | 0 |
| Affected fibroblast cell culture | 0.02 | 112 155 | 112 128 | 19 | 8 | 0 |
| Affected keratinocyte cell culture | 0.01 | 129 481 | 129 464 | 13 | 4 | 0 |
| Unaffected dermis | 0.15 | 133 486 | 133 264 | 206 | 15 | 1 |
| Unaffected fibroblast cell culture | 0.01 | 53 404 | 53 400 | 3 | 1 | 0 |
ref, reference allele; mut, mutation.
Figure 2
Cartoon representation of a heterotrimeric G-protein complex showing the location of the GNB2 K78 position. The alpha q subunit (Gα) shown in green, the beta subunit (Gβ) in cyan, the gamma subunit (Gϒ) in orange and GDP in magenta. The model is based on the 2.0 Å crystal structure of a heterotrimeric G-protein (PDB ID: 1GOT) (23). The GNB2 K78 (depicted in red) is located in the β-propeller of the Gβ subunit and interacts with D22 in N-terminal helix of Gα through a salt bridge. The figure was made with PYMOL (http://www.pymol.org).
Figure 3
Mutations in GNAQ and GNB2 reduce proliferation, but differentially affect migration. Proliferation curves for non-transduced (grey curves) and adenovirus-transduced HUVECs showing in (A) wild-type GNAQ (green curve), GNAQ R183Q (red curve) and GNAQ Q209L (orange curve), and in (B) wild-type GNB2 (green curve) and GNB2 K78E (red curve). Bars in panels right show mean ± standard error of the mean (SEM) of areas under curves (AUC) with individual data points showing mean values from six independent experiments, each containing three technical replicates. **P < 0.01. (C) Migration of HUVECs transduced with adenovirus vectors. Scratched areas in cell monolayers were measured at the moment of generating the scratch (0 h) and after 6 h. Bars show mean% ± standard deviation of covered area of the gap, with individual data points showing mean values from four or five independent experiments, each containing 36 technical replicates. *P < 0.05. All P-values are listed in Supplementary Material, Table S2.
Figure 4
Mutations in GNAQ and GNB2 differentially affect MAPK phosphorylation. Western blot of lysates of confluent and subconfluent HUVECs transduced with adenovirus vectors as indicated by labels. (A) Representative blots incubated with antibodies to pERK, pP38, pS6, pJNK and β-tubulin and (B) quantitation of pERK relative to β-tubulin loading control in mutants of GNB2 (n = 4) and GNAQ (n = 2). *P < 0.05, test not performed for GNAQ.
Figure 5
Mutations in GNAQ and GNB2 reduce YAP levels. Western blot of lysates of confluent and subconfluent HUVECs transduced with adenovirus vectors as indicated by labels. (A) Representative blots incubated with antibodies to YAP, pYAP S127 and β-tubulin and (B, C) quantitation of YAP (top), pYAP S127 (middle) and ratio of pYAP S127 to b-tubulin over YAP to b-tubulin (bottom) in subconfluent (B, n = 4) and confluent cultures (C, n = 4). *P < 0.05, **P < 0.01, ***P < 0.001.