1 research outputs found
Novel mutations in three families confirm a major role of COL4A1 in hereditary porencephaly
Background: Porencephaly (cystic cavities of the brain) is caused by perinatal vascular accidents from
various causes. Several familial cases have been described and autosomal dominant inheritance linked to
chromosome 13q has been suggested. COL4A1 is an essential component in basal membrane stability.
Mouse mutants bearing an in-frame deletion of exon 40 of Col4a1 either die from haemorrhage in the
perinatal period or have porencephaly in survivors. A report of inherited mutations in COL4A1 in two
families has shown that familial porencephaly may have the same cause in humans.
Objective: To describe three novel COL4A1 mutations.
Results: The three mutations occurred in three unrelated Dutch families. There were two missense mutations
of glycine residues predicted to result in abnormal collagen IV assembly, and one mutation predicted to
abolish the traditional COL4A1 start codon. The last mutation was also present in an asymptomatic
obligate carrier with white matter abnormalities on brain magnetic resonance imaging.
Conclusions: This observation confirms COL4A1 as a major locus for genetic predisposition to perinatal
cerebral haemorrhage and porencephaly and suggests variable expression of COL4A1 mutations