[HTML][HTML] A Mosaic Activating Mutation in AKT1 Associated with the Proteus Syndrome

MJ Lindhurst, JC Sapp, JK Teer… - … England Journal of …, 2011 - Mass Medical Soc
MJ Lindhurst, JC Sapp, JK Teer, JJ Johnston, EM Finn, K Peters, J Turner, JL Cannons…
New England Journal of Medicine, 2011Mass Medical Soc
Background The Proteus syndrome is characterized by the overgrowth of skin, connective
tissue, brain, and other tissues. It has been hypothesized that the syndrome is caused by
somatic mosaicism for a mutation that is lethal in the nonmosaic state. Methods We
performed exome sequencing of DNA from biopsy samples obtained from patients with the
Proteus syndrome and compared the resultant DNA sequences with those of unaffected
tissues obtained from the same patients. We confirmed and extended an observed …
Background
The Proteus syndrome is characterized by the overgrowth of skin, connective tissue, brain, and other tissues. It has been hypothesized that the syndrome is caused by somatic mosaicism for a mutation that is lethal in the nonmosaic state.
Methods
We performed exome sequencing of DNA from biopsy samples obtained from patients with the Proteus syndrome and compared the resultant DNA sequences with those of unaffected tissues obtained from the same patients. We confirmed and extended an observed association, using a custom restriction-enzyme assay to analyze the DNA in 158 samples from 29 patients with the Proteus syndrome. We then assayed activation of the AKT protein in affected tissues, using phosphorylation-specific antibodies on Western blots.
Results
Of 29 patients with the Proteus syndrome, 26 had a somatic activating mutation (c.49G→A, p.Glu17Lys) in the oncogene AKT1, encoding the AKT1 kinase, an enzyme known to mediate processes such as cell proliferation and apoptosis. Tissues and cell lines from patients with the Proteus syndrome harbored admixtures of mutant alleles that ranged from 1% to approximately 50%. Mutant cell lines showed greater AKT phosphorylation than did control cell lines. A pair of single-cell clones that were established from the same starting culture and differed with respect to their mutation status had different levels of AKT phosphorylation.
Conclusions
The Proteus syndrome is caused by a somatic activating mutation in AKT1, proving the hypothesis of somatic mosaicism and implicating activation of the PI3K–AKT pathway in the characteristic clinical findings of overgrowth and tumor susceptibility in this disorder. (Funded by the Intramural Research Program of the National Human Genome Research Institute.)
The New England Journal Of Medicine