Irrthum Alexandre, Devriendt Koenraad, Chitayat David, Matthijs Gert, Glade Conrad, Steijlen Peter M, Fryns Jean-Pierre, Van Steensel Maurice A M, Vikkula Miikka
Laboratory of Human Molecular Genetics, Christian de Duve Institute of Cellular Pathology and Université catholique de Louvain, Brussels, Belgium.
Am J Hum Genet. 2003 Jun;72(6):1470-8. doi: 10.1086/375614. Epub 2003 May 8.
Hereditary lymphedema is a developmental disorder characterized by chronic swelling of the extremities due to dysfunction of the lymphatic vessels. Two responsible genes have been identified: the vascular endothelial growth factor receptor 3 (VEGFR3) gene, implicated in congenital lymphedema, or Milroy disease, and the forkhead-related transcription factor gene FOXC2, causing lymphedema-distichiasis. We describe three families with an unusual association of hypotrichosis, lymphedema, and telangiectasia. Using microsatellite analysis, we first excluded both VEGFR3 and FOXC2 as causative genes; we then considered the murine ragged phenotype, caused by mutations in the Sox18 transcription factor, as a likely counterpart to the human disease, because it presents a combination of hair and cardiovascular anomalies, including symptoms of lymphatic dysfunction. Two of the families were consanguineous; in affected members of these families, we identified homozygous missense mutations in the SOX18 gene, located in 20q13. The two amino acid substitutions, W95R and A104P, affect conserved residues in the first alpha helix of the DNA-binding domain of the transcription factor. In the third family, the parents were nonconsanguineous, and both the affected child and his brother, who died in utero with hydrops fetalis, showed a heterozygous nonsense mutation that truncates the SOX18 protein in its transactivation domain; this substitution was not found in genomic DNA from either parent and hence constitutes a de novo germline mutation. Thus, we show that SOX18 mutations in humans cause both recessive and dominant hypotrichosis-lymphedema-telangiectasia, suggesting that, in addition to its established role in hair and blood vessel development, the SOX18 transcription factor plays a role in the development and/or maintenance of lymphatic vessels.
遗传性淋巴水肿是一种发育障碍,其特征是由于淋巴管功能障碍导致四肢慢性肿胀。已确定两个致病基因:与先天性淋巴水肿或米尔罗伊病有关的血管内皮生长因子受体3(VEGFR3)基因,以及导致淋巴水肿-双行睫的叉头相关转录因子基因FOXC2。我们描述了三个患有毛发稀少、淋巴水肿和毛细血管扩张异常关联的家族。通过微卫星分析,我们首先排除了VEGFR3和FOXC2作为致病基因;然后我们认为由Sox18转录因子突变引起的小鼠粗糙表型可能与人类疾病相对应,因为它呈现出毛发和心血管异常的组合,包括淋巴功能障碍症状。其中两个家族是近亲结婚;在这些家族的受影响成员中,我们在位于20q13的SOX18基因中鉴定出纯合错义突变。这两个氨基酸替换,W95R和A104P,影响转录因子DNA结合结构域第一个α螺旋中的保守残基。在第三个家族中,父母是非近亲结婚,患病儿童及其在子宫内死于胎儿水肿的兄弟均显示杂合无义突变,该突变在其反式激活结构域中截断了SOX18蛋白;在父母任何一方的基因组DNA中均未发现这种替换,因此构成了一种新生的种系突变。因此,我们表明人类中的SOX18突变会导致隐性和显性毛发稀少-淋巴水肿-毛细血管扩张,这表明,除了其在毛发和血管发育中已确定的作用外,SOX18转录因子在淋巴管的发育和/或维持中也发挥作用。