4.6 Article

PIK3CA Activating Mutations in Facial Infiltrating Lipomatosis

Journal

PLASTIC AND RECONSTRUCTIVE SURGERY
Volume 133, Issue 1, Pages 12E-19E

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/01.prs.0000436822.26709.7c

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Funding

  1. Manton Center for Orphan Disease Research at Boston Children's Hospital
  2. Howard Hughes Medical Institute
  3. Lung Grand Opportunity Sequencing Project [HL-102923]
  4. WHI Sequencing Project [HL-102924]
  5. Broad Grand Opportunity Sequencing Project [HL-102925]
  6. Seattle Grand Opportunity Sequencing Project [HL-102926]
  7. Heart Grand Opportunity Sequencing Project [HL-103010]

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Background: Facial infiltrating lipomatosis is a nonheritable disorder characterized by hemifacial soft-tissue and skeletal overgrowth, precocious dental development, macrodontia, hemimacroglossia, and mucosal neuromas. The authors tested the hypothesis that this condition is caused by a somatic mutation in the phosphatidylinositide-3 kinase (PI3K) signaling pathway, which has been indicted in other anomalies with overgrowth. Methods: The authors extracted DNA from abnormal tissue in six individuals, generated sequencing libraries, enriched the libraries for 26 genes involved in the PI3K pathway, and designed and applied a sequential filtering strategy to analyze the sequence data for mosaic mutations. Results: Unfiltered sequence data contained variant reads affecting similar to 12 percent of basepairs in the targeted genes. Filtering reduced the fraction of targeted basepairs containing variant reads to similar to 0.008 percent, allowing the authors to identify causal missense mutations in PIK3CA (p.E453K, p.E542K, p.H1047R, or p.H1047L) in each affected tissue sample. Conclusions: Affected tissue from individuals with facial infiltrating lipomatosis contains PIK3CA mutations that have previously been reported in cancers and in affected tissue from other nonheritable, overgrowth disorders, including congenital lipomatous overgrowth, vascular, epidermal, and skeletal anomalies syndrome, Klippel-Trenaunay syndrome, hemimegalencephaly, fibroadipose overgrowth, and macrodactyly. Because PIK3CA encodes a catalytic subunit of PI3K, and in vitro studies have shown that the overgrowth-associated mutations increase this enzyme's activity, PI3K inhibitors currently in clinical trials for patients with cancer may have a therapeutic role in patients with facial infiltrating lipomatosis. The strategy used to identify somatic mutations in patients with facial infiltrating lipomatosis is applicable to other somatic mosaic disorders that have allelic heterogeneity.

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