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Endothelial cell clonal expansion in the development of cerebral cavernous malformations

Authors :
Fabrizio Orsenigo
Maria Grazia Lampugnani
Matteo Malinverno
Federica Pisati
Abdallah Abu Taha
Peetra U. Magnusson
Monica Corada
Monica Giannotta
Yi Arial Zeng
Claudio Maderna
Carmela Fusco
Mariaelena Valentino
Qing Cissy Yu
Paolo Graziano
Elisabetta Dejana
Source :
Nature Communications, Vol 10, Iss 1, Pp 1-16 (2019), Nature Communications
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Nature Publishing Group, 2019.

Abstract

Cerebral cavernous malformation (CCM) is a neurovascular familial or sporadic disease that is characterised by capillary-venous cavernomas, and is due to loss-of-function mutations to any one of three CCM genes. Familial CCM follows a two-hit mechanism similar to that of tumour suppressor genes, while in sporadic cavernomas only a small fraction of endothelial cells shows mutated CCM genes. We reported that in mouse models and in human patients, endothelial cells lining the lesions have different features from the surrounding endothelium, as they express mesenchymal/stem-cell markers. Here we show that cavernomas originate from clonal expansion of few Ccm3-null endothelial cells that express mesenchymal/stem-cell markers. These cells then attract surrounding wild-type endothelial cells, inducing them to express mesenchymal/stem-cell markers and to contribute to cavernoma growth. These characteristics of Ccm3-null cells are reminiscent of the tumour-initiating cells that are responsible for tumour growth. Our data support the concept that CCM has benign tumour characteristics.<br />Cerebral cavernous malformation is a vascular disease characterized by capillary-venous cavernomas in the central nervous system. Here the authors show that cavernomas display benign tumor characteristics and originate from the clonal expansion of mutated endothelial progenitors which can attract surrounding wild-type cells, inducing their mesenchymal transition and leading to growth of the cavernoma.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
10
Issue :
1
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....387343385e9eba07c1efcbc09f63d3e2