HGF and MET mutations in primary and secondary lymphedema

DN Finegold, V Schacht, MA Kimak… - … research and biology, 2008 - liebertpub.com
DN Finegold, V Schacht, MA Kimak, EC Lawrence, E Foeldi, JM Karlsson, CJ Baty…
Lymphatic research and biology, 2008liebertpub.com
Background: Lymphedema is the abnormal accumulation of protein-rich fluid in the
interstitial space. Primary lymphedema is a rare genetic condition with both autosomal
dominant and autosomal recessive modes of inheritance. Three genes, FLT4 (VEGFR3),
FOXC2, and SOX18 cause varying forms of primary lymphedema. In industrialized countries,
secondary lymphedema is usually associated with cancer therapy and/or trauma. Recent
observations suggested that hepatocyte growth factor/high affinity hepatocyte growth factor …
Abstract
Background: Lymphedema is the abnormal accumulation of protein-rich fluid in the interstitial space. Primary lymphedema is a rare genetic condition with both autosomal dominant and autosomal recessive modes of inheritance. Three genes, FLT4 (VEGFR3), FOXC2, and SOX18 cause varying forms of primary lymphedema. In industrialized countries, secondary lymphedema is usually associated with cancer therapy and/or trauma. Recent observations suggested that hepatocyte growth factor/high affinity hepatocyte growth factor receptor (HGF/MET) were new candidate lymphedema genes.
Methods and Results: The coding exons and flanking regions of HGF and MET were directly sequenced in 145 lymphedema probands, 59 unrelated women with secondary lymphedema following treatment for breast cancer, 21 individual patients with lymphedema and intestinal lymphangiectasia, and at least 159 unrelated ethnic matched control individuals. Mutations leading to truncation or missense changes in evolutionarily conserved residues of HGF and MET were identified. These mutations were not polymorphic in control individuals.
Conclusions: The identification of HGF/MET mutations in primary lymphedema, lymphedema/lymphangiectasia, and breast cancer-associated secondary lymphedema suggests that the HGF/MET pathway is causal or alters susceptibility for a broad range of lymphedema phenotypes. The HGF/MET pathway provides a new target for the prevention and/or treatment of lymphedema.
Mary Ann Liebert