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PHACTR1 genetic variability is not critical in small vessel ischemic disease patients and PcomA recruitment in C57BL/6J mice

Authors :
Clemens Messerschmidt
Marco Foddis
Sonja Blumenau
Susanne Müller
Kajetan Bentele
Manuel Holtgrewe
Celia Kun-Rodrigues
Isabel Alonso
Maria do Carmo Macario
Ana Sofia Morgadinho
Ana Graça Velon
Gustavo Santo
Isabel Santana
Saana Mönkäre
Liina Kuuluvainen
Johanna Schleutker
Minna Pöyhönen
Liisa Myllykangas
Assunta Senatore
Daniel Berchtold
Katarzyna Winek
Andreas Meisel
Aleksandra Pavlovic
Vladimir Kostic
Valerija Dobricic
Ebba Lohmann
Hasmet Hanagasi
Gamze Guven
Basar Bilgic
Jose Bras
Rita Guerreiro
Dieter Beule
Ulrich Dirnagl
Celeste Sassi
Source :
Scientific Reports, Vol 11, Iss 1, Pp 1-11 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Nature Portfolio, 2021.

Abstract

Abstract Recently, several genome-wide association studies identified PHACTR1 as key locus for five diverse vascular disorders: coronary artery disease, migraine, fibromuscular dysplasia, cervical artery dissection and hypertension. Although these represent significant risk factors or comorbidities for ischemic stroke, PHACTR1 role in brain small vessel ischemic disease and ischemic stroke most important survival mechanism, such as the recruitment of brain collateral arteries like posterior communicating arteries (PcomAs), remains unknown. Therefore, we applied exome and genome sequencing in a multi-ethnic cohort of 180 early-onset independent familial and apparently sporadic brain small vessel ischemic disease and CADASIL-like Caucasian patients from US, Portugal, Finland, Serbia and Turkey and in 2 C57BL/6J stroke mouse models (bilateral common carotid artery stenosis [BCCAS] and middle cerebral artery occlusion [MCAO]), characterized by different degrees of PcomAs patency. We report 3 very rare coding variants in the small vessel ischemic disease-CADASIL-like cohort (p.Glu198Gln, p.Arg204Gly, p.Val251Leu) and a stop-gain mutation (p.Gln273*) in one MCAO mouse. These coding variants do not cluster in PHACTR1 known pathogenic domains and are not likely to play a critical role in small vessel ischemic disease or brain collateral circulation. We also exclude the possibility that copy number variants (CNVs) or a variant enrichment in Phactr1 may be associated with PcomA recruitment in BCCAS mice or linked to diverse vascular traits (cerebral blood flow pre-surgery, PcomA size, leptomeningeal microcollateral length and junction density during brain hypoperfusion) in C57BL/6J mice, respectively. Genetic variability in PHACTR1 is not likely to be a common susceptibility factor influencing small vessel ischemic disease in patients and PcomA recruitment in C57BL/6J mice. Nonetheless, rare variants in PHACTR1 RPEL domains may influence the stroke outcome and are worth investigating in a larger cohort of small vessel ischemic disease patients, different ischemic stroke subtypes and with functional studies.

Subjects

Subjects :
Medicine
Science

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20452322
Volume :
11
Issue :
1
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Scientific Reports
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.fd269f7adb7a4eddb42c68dbb59da734
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-84919-x