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Genetics of lymphatic anomalies

Authors :
Pascal Brouillard
Laurence M. Boon
Miikka Vikkula
UCL - SSS/DDUV - Institut de Duve
UCL - (SLuc) Centre de génétique médicale UCL
UCL - (SLuc) Service de chirurgie plastique
UCL - (SLuc) Centre de malformations vasculaires congénitales
Source :
Journal of Clinical Investigation, Vol. 124, no. 3, p. 898-904 (2014)
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
American Society for Clinical Investigation, 2014.

Abstract

Lymphatic anomalies include a variety of developmental and/or functional defects affecting the lymphatic vessels: sporadic and familial forms of primary lymphedema, secondary lymphedema, chylothorax and chylous ascites, lymphatic malformations, and overgrowth syndromes with a lymphatic component. Germline mutations have been identified in at least 20 genes that encode proteins acting around VEGFR-3 signaling but also downstream of other tyrosine kinase receptors. These mutations exert their effects via the RAS/MAPK and the PI3K/AKT pathways and explain more than a quarter of the incidence of primary lymphedema, mostly of inherited forms. More common forms may also result from multigenic effects or post-zygotic mutations. Most of the corresponding murine knockouts are homozygous lethal, while heterozygotes are healthy, which suggests differences in human and murine physiology and the influence of other factors.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Clinical Investigation, Vol. 124, no. 3, p. 898-904 (2014)
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....7d6e6c2b74ab194045469e06eadcdc36