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Identification of a rare BMP pathway mutation in a non-syndromic human brain arteriovenous malformation via exome sequencing
by
Koch, Matthew J
, Zhou, Sirui
, Dion, Patrick A
, Birk, Harjus
, Spiegelman, Dan
, Kahle, Kristopher T
, Walcott, Brian P
, Dionne-laporte, Alexandre
, Rouleau, Guy A
, Winkler, Ethan A
, Lawton, Michael T
, Stapleton, Christopher J
, Guo, Diana
in
Brain
/ Mutation
/ Proteins
2018
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Identification of a rare BMP pathway mutation in a non-syndromic human brain arteriovenous malformation via exome sequencing
by
Koch, Matthew J
, Zhou, Sirui
, Dion, Patrick A
, Birk, Harjus
, Spiegelman, Dan
, Kahle, Kristopher T
, Walcott, Brian P
, Dionne-laporte, Alexandre
, Rouleau, Guy A
, Winkler, Ethan A
, Lawton, Michael T
, Stapleton, Christopher J
, Guo, Diana
in
Brain
/ Mutation
/ Proteins
2018
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Do you wish to request the book?
Identification of a rare BMP pathway mutation in a non-syndromic human brain arteriovenous malformation via exome sequencing
by
Koch, Matthew J
, Zhou, Sirui
, Dion, Patrick A
, Birk, Harjus
, Spiegelman, Dan
, Kahle, Kristopher T
, Walcott, Brian P
, Dionne-laporte, Alexandre
, Rouleau, Guy A
, Winkler, Ethan A
, Lawton, Michael T
, Stapleton, Christopher J
, Guo, Diana
in
Brain
/ Mutation
/ Proteins
2018
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Identification of a rare BMP pathway mutation in a non-syndromic human brain arteriovenous malformation via exome sequencing
Journal Article
Identification of a rare BMP pathway mutation in a non-syndromic human brain arteriovenous malformation via exome sequencing
2018
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Overview
Brain arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) are abnormal connections between arteries and veins that can result in hemorrhagic stroke. A genetic basis for AVMs is suspected, and we investigated potential mutations in a 14-year-old girl who developed a recurrent brain AVM. Whole-exome sequencing (WES) of AVM lesion tissue and blood was performed accompanied by in silico modeling, protein expression observation in lesion tissue and zebrafish modeling. A stop-gain mutation (c.C739T:p.R247X) in the gene SMAD family member 9 (SMAD9) was discovered. In the human brain tissue, immunofluorescent staining demonstrated a vascular predominance of SMAD9 at the protein level. Vascular SMAD9 was markedly reduced in AVM peri-nidal blood vessels, which was accompanied by a decrease in phosphorylated SMAD4, a downstream effector protein of the bone morphogenic protein signaling pathway. Zebrafish modeling (Tg kdrl:eGFP) of the morpholino splice site and translation-blocking knockdown of SMAD9 resulted in abnormal cerebral artery-to-vein connections with morphologic similarities to human AVMs. Orthogonal trajectories of evidence established a relationship between the candidate mutation discovered in SMAD9 via WES and the clinical phenotype. Replication in similar rare cases of recurrent AVM, or even more broadly sporadic AVM, may be informative in building a more comprehensive understanding of AVM pathogenesis.
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