PDE3A mutations cause autosomal dominant hypertension with brachydactyly.
Philipp G MaassAtakan AydinFriedrich C LuftCarolin SchächterleAnja WeiseSigmar StrickerCarsten LindschauMartin VaeglerFatimunnisa QadriHakan R TokaHerbert SchulzPeter M KrawitzDmitri ParkhomchukJochen HechtIrene HollfingerYvette Wefeld-NeuenfeldEireen Bartels-KleinAstrid MühlMartin KannHerbert SchusterDavid ChitayatMartin G BialerThomas F WienkerJürg OttKatharina RittscherThomas LiehrJens JordanGhislaine PlessisJens TankKnut MaiRamin NaraghiRussell HodgeMaxwell HoppLars O HattenbachAndreas BusjahnAnita RauchFabrice VandeputMaolian GongFranz RüschendorfNorbert HübnerHermann HallerStefan MundlosNihat BilginturanMatthew A MovsesianEnno KlussmannOkan TokaSylvia BähringPublished in: Nature genetics (2015)
Cardiovascular disease is the most common cause of death worldwide, and hypertension is the major risk factor. Mendelian hypertension elucidates mechanisms of blood pressure regulation. Here we report six missense mutations in PDE3A (encoding phosphodiesterase 3A) in six unrelated families with mendelian hypertension and brachydactyly type E (HTNB). The syndrome features brachydactyly type E (BDE), severe salt-independent but age-dependent hypertension, an increased fibroblast growth rate, neurovascular contact at the rostral-ventrolateral medulla, altered baroreflex blood pressure regulation and death from stroke before age 50 years when untreated. In vitro analyses of mesenchymal stem cell-derived vascular smooth muscle cells (VSMCs) and chondrocytes provided insights into molecular pathogenesis. The mutations increased protein kinase A-mediated PDE3A phosphorylation and resulted in gain of function, with increased cAMP-hydrolytic activity and enhanced cell proliferation. Levels of phosphorylated VASP were diminished, and PTHrP levels were dysregulated. We suggest that the identified PDE3A mutations cause the syndrome. VSMC-expressed PDE3A deserves scrutiny as a therapeutic target for the treatment of hypertension.
Keyphrases
- blood pressure
- hypertensive patients
- vascular smooth muscle cells
- cardiovascular disease
- heart rate
- cell proliferation
- protein kinase
- stem cells
- blood glucose
- type diabetes
- case report
- atrial fibrillation
- risk factors
- bone marrow
- angiotensin ii
- intellectual disability
- signaling pathway
- cord blood
- binding protein
- extracellular matrix
- smoking cessation
- arterial hypertension
- wound healing