AI Article Synopsis

  • Cerebral cavernous malformations (CCMs) are problems in blood vessels that can cause serious issues like epilepsy and stroke, especially when inherited from a specific genetic mutation.
  • Scientists studied different types of genes in two models of mice (acute and chronic) to see how CCMs affect them differently. They found many genes acting differently depending on whether the problem was new or old.
  • Their findings suggest that new problems are more about cell growth, while long-term issues are related to inflammation and how cells stick together, plus they think certain small pieces of RNA in the blood could help in understanding or diagnosing the disease better.

Article Abstract

Cerebral cavernous malformations (CCMs) are dilated capillaries causing epilepsy and stroke. Inheritance of a heterozygous mutation in CCM3/PDCD10 is responsible for the most aggressive familial form of the disease. Here we studied the differences and commonalities between the transcriptomes of microdissected lesional neurovascular units (NVUs) from acute and chronic in vivo Ccm3/Pdcd10 mice, and cultured brain microvascular endothelial cells (BMECs) Ccm3/Pdcd10.We identified 2409 differentially expressed genes (DEGs) in acute and 2962 in chronic in vivo NVUs compared to microdissected brain capillaries, as well as 121 in in vitro BMECs with and without Ccm3/Pdcd10 loss (fold change ≥ |2.0|; p < 0.05, false discovery rate corrected). A functional clustered dendrogram generated using the Euclidean distance showed that the DEGs identified only in acute in vivo NVUs were clustered in cellular proliferation gene ontology functions. The DEGs only identified in chronic in vivo NVUs were clustered in inflammation and immune response, permeability, and adhesion functions. In addition, 1225 DEGs were only identified in the in vivo NVUs but not in vitro BMECs, and these clustered within neuronal and glial functions. One miRNA mmu-miR-3472a was differentially expressed (FC = - 5.98; p = 0.07, FDR corrected) in the serum of Ccm3/Pdcd10 when compared to wild type mice, and this was functionally related as a putative target to Cand2 (cullin associated and neddylation dissociated 2), a DEG in acute and chronic lesional NVUs and in vitro BMECs. Our results suggest that the acute model is characterized by cell proliferation, while the chronic model showed inflammatory, adhesion and permeability processes. In addition, we highlight the importance of extra-endothelial structures in CCM disease, and potential role of circulating miRNAs as biomarkers of disease, interacting with DEGs. The extensive DEGs library of each model will serve as a validation tool for potential mechanistic, biomarker, and therapeutic targets.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6699077PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40478-019-0789-0DOI Listing

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