Mutation and expression analysis of the endoglin gene in hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia reveals null alleles

Carol J. Gallione(Duke Medical Center), Daniel J. Klaus(Duke University Hospital), Eric Y. Yeh(Duke Medical Center), Timothy T. Stenzel(Duke University Hospital), Yan Xue(Duke University Hospital), Kara B. Anthony(Duke University Hospital), Kimberly A. McAllister(Duke Medical Center), Melanie A. Baldwin(Duke Medical Center), Jonathan Berg(Duke University Hospital), Andreas Lux(Duke University Hospital), Joshua D. Smith(Maine Medical Center), Calvin Vary(Maine Medical Center), William J. Craigen(Baylor College of Medicine), C. J. J. Westermann(St. Antonius Ziekenhuis), M. L. Warner(University of Colorado Denver), York E. Miller(University of Colorado Denver), Charles E. Jackson(Henry Ford Hospital), Alan E. Guttmacher(University of Vermont), Douglas A. Marchuk(Duke University Hospital)
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Abstract

Hereditary Hemorrhagic Telangiectasia (HHT) is an autosomal dominant disorder characterized by multisystemic vascular dysplasia and recurrent hemorrhage from the sites of vascular lesions. Two genes have been identified for HHT. Endoglin, a TGF-β binding protein which maps to chromosome 9q3, is the gene for HHT1. The type and location of most of the previously described mutations in the endoglin (ENG) gene suggested a dominant-negative model of receptor–complex dysfunction for the molecular basis of this disorder. In this article we describe 11 novel ENG mutations in HHT kindreds, which include missense and splice-site mutations. Two identical missense mutations in unrelated families disrupt the start codon of the gene. In addition, some frameshift and nonsense mutations lead to very low or undetectable levels of transcript from the mutant allele. These combined data suggest that the nature of most ENG mutations is to create a null (nonfunctional) allele, and that there is no requirement for the synthesis of a truncated endoglin protein in the pathogenesis of HHT. Hum Mutat 11:286–294, 1998. © 1998 Wiley-Liss, Inc.


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