posted on 2015-12-03, 12:45authored byRichard C. Trembath, Jennifer R. Thomson, Rajiv D. Machado, Neil V. Morgan, C. Atkinson, I. Winship, G. Simonneau, N. Galie, J. E. Loyd, M. Humbert, W. C. Nichols, N. W. Morrell
Background Most patients with familial primary
pulmonary hypertension have defects in the gene for
bone morphogenetic protein receptor II (BMPR2), a
member of the transforming growth factor b (TGF-b)
superfamily of receptors. Because patients with hereditary
hemorrhagic telangiectasia may have lung
disease that is indistinguishable from primary pulmonary
hypertension, we investigated the genetic basis
of lung disease in these patients.
Methods We evaluated members of five kindreds
plus one individual patient with hereditary hemorrhagic
telangiectasia and identified 10 cases of pulmonary
hypertension. In the two largest families, we
used microsatellite markers to test for linkage to genes
encoding TGF-b–receptor proteins, including endoglin
and activin-receptor–like kinase 1 (ALK1), and BMPR2.
In subjects with hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia
and pulmonary hypertension, we also scanned
ALK1 and BMPR2 for mutations.
Results We identified suggestive linkage of pulmonary
hypertension with hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia
on chromosome 12q13, a region that includes
ALK1. We identified amino acid changes in activinreceptor–like
kinase 1 that were inherited in subjects
who had a disorder with clinical and histologic features
indistinguishable from those of primary pulmonary
hypertension. Immunohistochemical analysis in
four subjects and one control showed pulmonary vascular
endothelial expression of activin-receptor–like
kinase 1 in normal and diseased pulmonary arteries.
Conclusions Pulmonary hypertension in association
with hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia can
involve mutations in ALK1. These mutations are associated
with diverse effects, including the vascular
dilatation characteristic of hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia
and the occlusion of small pulmonary arteries
that is typical of primary pulmonary hypertension.
(N Engl J Med 2001;345:325-34.)