학술논문

Phenotypic characterization of murine models of cerebral cavernous malformations
Document Type
article
Source
Laboratory Investigation. 99(3)
Subject
Medical Physiology
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Rare Diseases
Neurosciences
Genetics
Brain Disorders
2.1 Biological and endogenous factors
Aetiology
Cardiovascular
Acute Disease
Animals
Apoptosis Regulatory Proteins
B-Lymphocytes
Brain
Cerebellum
Chronic Disease
Disease Models
Animal
Endothelial Cells
Hemangioma
Cavernous
Central Nervous System
Humans
Intracellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins
Iron
KRIT1 Protein
Mice
Mice
Knockout
Mice
Transgenic
Microfilament Proteins
Mutation
Occludin
Phenotype
T-Lymphocytes
rho-Associated Kinases
Clinical Sciences
Pathology
Clinical sciences
Language
Abstract
Cerebral cavernous malformations (CCMs) are clusters of dilated capillaries that affect around 0.5% of the population. CCMs exist in two forms, sporadic and familial. Mutations in three documented genes, KRIT1(CCM1), CCM2, and PDCD10(CCM3), cause the autosomal dominant form of the disease, and somatic mutations in these same genes underlie lesion development in the brain. Murine models with constitutive or induced loss of respective genes have been applied to study disease pathobiology and therapeutic manipulations. We aimed to analyze the phenotypic characteristic of two main groups of models, the chronic heterozygous models with sensitizers promoting genetic instability, and the acute neonatal induced homozygous knockout model. Acute model mice harbored a higher lesion burden than chronic models, more localized in the hindbrain, and largely lacking iron deposition and inflammatory cell infiltrate. The chronic model mice showed a lower lesion burden localized throughout the brain, with significantly greater perilesional iron deposition, immune B- and T-cell infiltration, and less frequent junctional protein immunopositive endothelial cells. Lesional endothelial cells in both models expressed similar phosphorylated myosin light chain immunopositivity indicating Rho-associated protein kinase activity. These data suggest that acute models are better suited to study the initial formation of the lesion, while the chronic models better reflect lesion maturation, hemorrhage, and inflammatory response, relevant pathobiologic features of the human disease.