Nah Hyun-Duck, Koyama Eiki, Agochukwu Nneamaka B, Bartlett Scott P, Muenke Maximilian
Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine, Philadelphia, PA 19104, USA.
Childs Nerv Syst. 2012 Sep;28(9):1483-93. doi: 10.1007/s00381-012-1778-9. Epub 2012 Aug 8.
The Muenke syndrome mutation (FGFR3 (P250R)), which was discovered 15 years ago, represents the single most common craniosynostosis mutation. Muenke syndrome is characterized by coronal suture synostosis, midface hypoplasia, subtle limb anomalies, and hearing loss. However, the spectrum of clinical presentation continues to expand. To better understand the pathophysiology of the Muenke syndrome, we present collective findings from several recent studies that have characterized a genetically equivalent mouse model for Muenke syndrome (FgfR3 (P244R)) and compare them with human phenotypes.
FgfR3 (P244R) mutant mice show premature fusion of facial sutures, premaxillary and/or zygomatic sutures, but rarely the coronal suture. The mice also lack the typical limb phenotype. On the other hand, the mutant mice display maxillary retrusion in association with a shortening of the anterior cranial base and a premature closure of intersphenoidal and spheno-occipital synchondroses, resembling human midface hypoplasia. In addition, sensorineural hearing loss is detected in all FgfR3 (P244R) mutant mice as in the majority of Muenke syndrome patients. It is caused by a defect in the mechanism of cell fate determination in the organ of Corti. The mice also express phenotypes that have not been previously described in humans, such as reduced cortical bone thickness, hypoplastic trabecular bone, and defective temporomandibular joint structure. Therefore, the FgfR3 (P244R) mouse provides an excellent opportunity to study disease mechanisms of some classical phenotypes of Muenke syndrome and to test novel therapeutic strategies. The mouse model can also be further explored to discover previously unreported yet potentially significant phenotypes of Muenke syndrome.
15年前发现的穆恩克综合征突变(FGFR3(P250R))是最常见的颅缝早闭突变。穆恩克综合征的特征为冠状缝早闭、面中部发育不全、轻微肢体异常和听力丧失。然而,其临床表现谱仍在不断扩展。为了更好地理解穆恩克综合征的病理生理学,我们展示了几项近期研究的综合结果,这些研究对穆恩克综合征的基因等效小鼠模型(FgfR3(P244R))进行了特征描述,并将其与人类表型进行比较。
FgfR3(P244R)突变小鼠表现出面部缝线、前颌骨和/或颧骨缝线过早融合,但冠状缝很少出现这种情况。这些小鼠也缺乏典型的肢体表型。另一方面,突变小鼠表现出上颌后缩,伴有前颅底缩短以及蝶骨间和蝶枕软骨联合过早闭合,类似于人类面中部发育不全。此外,与大多数穆恩克综合征患者一样,在所有FgfR3(P244R)突变小鼠中均检测到感音神经性听力损失。这是由柯蒂氏器中细胞命运决定机制的缺陷引起的。这些小鼠还表现出一些人类中先前未描述过的表型,如皮质骨厚度降低、小梁骨发育不全和颞下颌关节结构缺陷。因此,FgfR3(P244R)小鼠为研究穆恩克综合征某些经典表型的疾病机制以及测试新的治疗策略提供了绝佳机会。该小鼠模型还可进一步探索,以发现穆恩克综合征先前未报道但可能具有重要意义的表型。