A novel mouse model of cerebral cavernous malformations based on the two-hit mutation hypothesis recapitulates the human disease

DA McDonald, R Shenkar, C Shi… - Human molecular …, 2011 - academic.oup.com
DA McDonald, R Shenkar, C Shi, RA Stockton, AL Akers, MH Kucherlapati, R Kucherlapati…
Human molecular genetics, 2011academic.oup.com
Cerebral cavernous malformations (CCMs) are vascular lesions of the central nervous
system appearing as multicavernous, blood-filled capillaries, leading to headache, seizure
and hemorrhagic stroke. CCM occurs either sporadically or as an autosomal dominant
disorder caused by germline mutation of one of the three genes: CCM1/KRIT1,
CCM2/MGC4607 and CCM3/PDCD10. Surgically resected human CCM lesions have
provided molecular and immunohistochemical evidence for a two-hit (germline plus somatic) …
Abstract
Cerebral cavernous malformations (CCMs) are vascular lesions of the central nervous system appearing as multicavernous, blood-filled capillaries, leading to headache, seizure and hemorrhagic stroke. CCM occurs either sporadically or as an autosomal dominant disorder caused by germline mutation of one of the three genes: CCM1/KRIT1, CCM2/MGC4607 and CCM3/PDCD10. Surgically resected human CCM lesions have provided molecular and immunohistochemical evidence for a two-hit (germline plus somatic) mutation mechanism. In contrast to the equivalent human genotype, mice heterozygous for a Ccm1- or Ccm2-null allele do not develop CCM lesions. Based on the two-hit hypothesis, we attempted to improve the penetrance of the model by crossing Ccm1 and Ccm2 heterozygotes into a mismatch repair-deficient Msh2−/− background. Ccm1+/−Msh2−/− mice exhibit CCM lesions with high penetrance as shown by magnetic resonance imaging and histology. Significantly, the CCM lesions range in size from early-stage, isolated caverns to large, multicavernous lesions. A subset of endothelial cells within the CCM lesions revealed somatic loss of CCM protein staining, supporting the two-hit mutation mechanism. The late-stage CCM lesions displayed many of the characteristics of human CCM lesions, including hemosiderin deposits, immune cell infiltration, increased endothelial cell proliferation and increased Rho-kinase activity. Some of these characteristics were also seen, but to a lesser extent, in early-stage lesions. Tight junctions were maintained between CCM lesion endothelial cells, but gaps were evident between endothelial cells and basement membrane was defective. In contrast, the Ccm2+/−Msh2−/− mice lacked cerebrovascular lesions. The CCM1 mouse model provides an in vivo tool to investigate CCM pathogenesis and new therapies.
Oxford University Press