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Somatic and germline CACNA1D calcium channel mutations in aldosterone-producing adenomas and primary aldosteronism

Authors :
Steven K. Libutti
Ute I. Scholl
Murim Choi
Christoph Fahlke
Gabriel Stölting
Richard P. Lifton
Tammy M. Brady
Regina Campos de Oliveira
John W. Kunstman
Patricia Hidalgo
Matthew Benson
Tobias Carling
Shrikant Mane
Nelly Mauras
Peyman Björklund
Erum A. Hartung
Carol Nelson-Williams
Per Hellman
John D. Overton
Lee F. Starker
Göran Åkerström
Erin Loring
Manju L. Prasad
Gunnar Westin
Jay R. Shapiro
Annabelle L. Fonseca
Gerald Goh
Reju Korah
Source :
Nature genetics
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

Adrenal aldosterone-producing adenomas (APAs) constitutively produce the salt-retaining hormone aldosterone and are a common cause of severe hypertension. Recurrent mutations in the potassium channel KCNJ5 that result in cell depolarization and Ca2+ influx cause ~40% of these tumors1. We found five somatic mutations (four altering glycine 403, one altering isoleucine 770) in CACNA1D, encoding a voltage-gated calcium channel, among 43 non-KCNJ5-mutant APAs. These mutations lie in S6 segments that line the channel pore. Both result in channel activation at less depolarized potentials, and glycine 403 mutations also impair channel inactivation. These effects are inferred to cause increased Ca2+ influx, the sufficient stimulus for aldosterone production and cell proliferation in adrenal glomerulosa2. Remarkably, we identified de novo mutations at the identical positions in two children with a previously undescribed syndrome featuring primary aldosteronism and neuromuscular abnormalities. These findings implicate gain of function Ca2+ channel mutations in aldosterone-producing adenomas and primary aldosteronism.

Details

ISSN :
15461718
Volume :
45
Issue :
9
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature genetics
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....ea8430f87b1f76ecbe0539a44face77a