4.6 Article

Somatic GJA4 gain-of-function mutation in orbital cavernous venous malformations

Journal

ANGIOGENESIS
Volume 26, Issue 1, Pages 37-52

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10456-022-09846-5

Keywords

Vascular malformations; Orbital disease; Connexin; Gap junction protein; Whole-cell voltage clamp; Endothelial cell

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Our study identified a somatic missense mutation in GJA4 gene that may be a driver mutation for OCVM. Our findings suggested that hyperactive hemichannel plays a role in the development of this vascular phenotype.
Orbital cavernous venous malformation (OCVM) is a sporadic vascular anomaly of uncertain etiology characterized by abnormally dilated vascular channels. Here, we identify a somatic missense mutation, c.121G > T (p.Gly41Cys) in GJA4, which encodes a transmembrane protein that is a component of gap junctions and hemichannels in the vascular system, in OCVM tissues from 25/26 (96.2%) individuals with OCVM. GJA4 expression was detected in OCVM tissue including endothelial cells and the stroma, through immunohistochemistry. Within OCVM tissue, the mutation allele frequency was higher in endothelial cell-enriched fractions obtained using magnetic-activated cell sorting. Whole-cell voltage clamp analysis in Xenopus oocytes revealed that GJA4 c.121G > T (p.Gly41Cys) is a gain-of-function mutation that leads to the formation of a hyperactive hemichannel. Overexpression of the mutant protein in human umbilical vein endothelial cells led to a loss of cellular integrity, which was rescued by carbenoxolone, a non-specific gap junction/hemichannel inhibitor. Our data suggest that GJA4 c.121G > T (p.Gly41Cys) is a potential driver gene mutation for OCVM. We propose that hyperactive hemichannel plays a role in the development of this vascular phenotype.

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