Sturge–Weber Syndrome and Port-Wine Stains Caused by Somatic Mutation in GNAQ
Kennedy Krieger Institute · Duke Medical Center · +4 more institutions
Abstract
The Sturge-Weber syndrome is a sporadic congenital neurocutaneous disorder characterized by a port-wine stain affecting the skin in the distribution of the ophthalmic branch of the trigeminal nerve, abnormal capillary venous vessels in the leptomeninges of the brain and choroid, glaucoma, seizures, stroke, and intellectual disability. It has been hypothesized that somatic mosaic mutations disrupting vascular development cause both the Sturge-Weber syndrome and port-wine stains, and the severity and extent of presentation are determined by the developmental time point at which the mutations occurred. To date, no such mutation has been identified.
We performed whole-genome sequencing of DNA from paired samples of visibly affected and normal tissue from 3 persons with the Sturge-Weber syndrome. We tested for the presence of a somatic mosaic mutation in 97 samples from 50 persons with the Sturge-Weber syndrome, a port-wine stain, or neither (controls), using amplicon sequencing and SNaPshot assays, and investigated the effects of the mutation on downstream signaling, using phosphorylation-specific antibodies for relevant effectors and a luciferase reporter assay.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 70.76
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 26
Authors
10Topics & keywords
- Sturge–Weber syndrome
- GNAQ
- Medicine
- Pathology
- Germline mutation
- Port-wine stain
- Missense mutation
- Point mutation