Endoglin (CD105) is expressed on the surface of endothelial and haematopoietic cells in mammals and binds TGFbeta isoforms 1 and 3 in combination with the signaling complex of TGFbeta receptors types I and II. Endoglin expression increases during angiogenesis, wound healing, and inflammation, all of which are associated with TGFbeta signaling and alterations in vascular structure. The importance of endoglin for normal vascular architecture is further indicated by the association of mutations in the endoglin gene with the inherited disorder Hereditary Haemorrhagic Telangiectasia Type 1 (HHT1), a disease characterised by bleeding from vascular malformations. In order to study the role of endoglin in vivo in more detail and to work toward developing an animal model of HHT1, we have derived mice that carry a targeted nonsense mutation in the endoglin gene. Studies on these mice have revealed that endoglin is essential for early development. Embryos homozygous for the endoglin mutation fail to progress beyond 10.5 days postcoitum and fail to form mature blood vessels in the yolk sac. This phenotype is remarkably similar to that of the TGFbeta1 and the TGFbeta receptor II knockout mice, indicating that endoglin is needed in vivo for TGFbeta1 signaling during extraembryonic vascular development. In addition, we have observed cardiac defects in homozygous endoglin-deficient embryos, suggesting endoglin also plays a role in cardiogenesis. We anticipate that heterozygous mice will ultimately serve as a useful disease model for HHT1, as some individuals have dilated and fragile blood vessels similar to vascular malformations seen in HHT patients.
Phosphoinositides are small phospholipids that control diverse cellular downstream signaling events. Their spatial and temporal availability is tightly regulated by a set of specific lipid kinases and phosphatases. Congenital muscular dystrophies are hereditary disorders characterized by hypotonia and weakness from birth with variable eye and central nervous system involvement. In individuals exhibiting congenital muscular dystrophy, early-onset cataracts, and mild intellectual disability but normal cranial magnetic resonance imaging, we identified bi-allelic mutations in INPP5K, encoding inositol polyphosphate-5-phosphatase K. Mutations impaired phosphatase activity toward the phosphoinositide phosphatidylinositol (4,5)-bisphosphate or altered the subcellular localization of INPP5K. Downregulation of INPP5K orthologs in zebrafish embryos disrupted muscle fiber morphology and resulted in abnormal eye development. These data link congenital muscular dystrophies to defective phosphoinositide 5-phosphatase activity that is becoming increasingly recognized for its role in mediating pivotal cellular mechanisms contributing to disease.
Enhanced endoglin expression is not limited to angiogenesis, it is also associated with inflammation.
Mutations in the genes encoding collagen VI (COL6A1, COL6A2, and COL6A3) cause Bethlem myopathy (BM) and Ullrich congenital muscular dystrophy (UCMD), two related conditions of differing severity. BM is a relatively mild dominantly inherited disorder characterized by proximal weakness and distal joint contractures. UCMD was originally regarded as an exclusively autosomal recessive condition causing severe muscle weakness with proximal joint contractures and distal hyperlaxity. We and others have subsequently modified this model when we described UCMD patients with heterozygous in-frame deletions acting in a dominant-negative way. Here we report 10 unrelated patients with a UCMD clinical phenotype and de novo dominant negative heterozygous splice mutations in COL6A1, COL6A2, and COL6A3 and contrast our findings with four UCMD patients with recessively acting splice mutations and two BM patients with heterozygous splice mutations. We find that the location of the skipped exon relative to the molecular structure of the collagen chain strongly correlates with the clinical phenotype. Analysis by immunohistochemical staining of muscle biopsies and dermal fibroblast cultures, as well as immunoprecipitation to study protein biosynthesis and assembly, suggests different mechanisms each for exon skipping mutations underlying dominant UCMD, dominant BM, and recessive UCMD. We provide further evidence that de novo dominant mutations in severe UCMD occur relatively frequently in all three collagen VI chains and offer biochemical insight into genotype-phenotype correlations within the collagen VI-related disorders by showing that severity of the phenotype depends on the ability of mutant chains to be incorporated in the multimeric structure of collagen VI.
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