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(Chest. 2002;121:46S-50S.)
© 2002 American College of Chest Physicians

Genetics and Gene Expression in Pulmonary Hypertension*

Parker B. Francis Lecture

James E. Loyd, MD

* From Allergy, Pulmonary, and Critical Care Medicine, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN.

Correspondence to: James E. Loyd, MD, Professor of Medicine, Allergy, Pulmonary, and Critical Care Medicine, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, 1211 22nd Ave S, Nashville, TN; e-mail: jim.loyd{at}mcmail.vanderbilt.edu

The prototype of clinical pulmonary hypertension is primary pulmonary hypertension (PPH), for which interesting new information is available. PPH is a severe and progressive disease with a mean survival of < 3 years without treatment. The central feature of PPH is widespread obstructive lesions of small pulmonary arteries. Despite dramatic advances in many aspects of PPH during the past decade, including improved diagnosis, new understanding of biological mediators, and the development of the first effective therapy, the possibility of prevention or cure seems elusive unless the central basic mechanisms are identified and characterized.


    Genetics
 TOP
 Genetics
 FPPH: Lung Pathology
 FPPH: Current Status
 Microsatellite Search Linked a...
 Heterozygous Mutations in Bone...
 Bone Morphogenetic Proteins
 BMPR2 mutations were also...
 A Mutation in BMPR2...
 What Causes PPH in...
 PPH Gene Expression: Microarray...
 Is the Plexiform Lesion...
 Summary
 References
 
In a large prospective study,1 6% of patients reported a family history of PPH, but reports2 suggest that a larger percentage (>= 25%) has a genetic basis. Confirmation of the speculation that most PPH is genetic will require further evidence. Clinical and pathologic manifestations are identical whether PPH is familial or acquired sporadically. The largest study3 to examine the pattern of inheritance included 24 PPH families. Among a total of 429 family members, there were 124 individuals known to carry the gene, who were identified by having PPH themselves or having progeny with PPH. Vertical transmission was readily apparent in these pedigrees, with many cases of father-to-son transmission, thereby excluding X-linkage. These features indicate autosomal dominant transmission, and incomplete penetrance was present as well. More female subjects (84 female and 40 male subjects) had the gene (ie, they had PPH or progeny with it); among those who had the gene, more female subjects had disease develop (72 of 84 female subjects [86%] vs 27 of 40 male subjects [68%]). The penetrance of disease appears to be highly variable across different PPH families.

Gender ratios of the progeny of affected members and carriers were also analyzed, and the ages at death from PPH were analyzed by generation. Significantly more female subjects (n = 160) than male subjects (n = 122) were born to persons who carry the familial PPH (FPPH) gene. This abnormal gender ratio of progeny remains to be fully explained, but suggests the occurrence of selective loss of male fetuses or an abnormal primary sex ratio at conception. Interestingly, a gene recently identified to cause PPH, described later, is in a category that has been widely recognized to be important in development, morphogenesis, and organogenesis.4 The mean age at death from PPH was the same for male and female subjects. Genetic anticipation, shown as decreasing age at death in subsequent generations, was present and statistically significant; the age at death was 45.6 years in the oldest generation, vs 36.3 years in the next generation, and then 24.2 years. The advances in molecular understanding described to follow have not yet explained the phenomenon of genetic anticipation in PPH, so it remains inconclusive at present whether its basis is biological or artifactual.

Although women have FPPH develop twice as commonly as men, cumulative mortality curves of each gender are similar, suggesting that the course or severity of PPH are similar independent of gender (Fig 1 ). FPPH-mortality distribution among 110 female and 51 male subjects demonstrates that FPPH has a broad range of ages of affected patients, such that 20% of deaths occur after the age of 50 years, and 20% before the age of 20 years. FPPH occurs in either gender (female/male ratio, 2:1) at any age, unlike the former clinical opinion that PPH was predominantly a disease of young adult women. The age distribution of PPH appears uniform across all of life, and the explanation for the broad variability in age of onset is also needed.



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Figure 1.. Cumulative mortality in patients with FPPH by gender.

 
Penetrance of FPPH is variable and quite low in some families, causing skip generations in which disease is not manifested. This finding led to early suggestions that many PPH patients who appear to have sporadic acquired disease may in fact have a genetic basis that was unrecognized.


    FPPH: Lung Pathology
 TOP
 Genetics
 FPPH: Lung Pathology
 FPPH: Current Status
 Microsatellite Search Linked a...
 Heterozygous Mutations in Bone...
 Bone Morphogenetic Proteins
 BMPR2 mutations were also...
 A Mutation in BMPR2...
 What Causes PPH in...
 PPH Gene Expression: Microarray...
 Is the Plexiform Lesion...
 Summary
 References
 
Pulmonary vascular pathologists categorize PPH into numerous different pathologic classes. The most common pathologic categories are "plexogenic" and "thromboembolic" PPH. A study to examine the spectrum of pathologic changes in patients with FPPH was performed to determine the number of pathologic subsets, to avoid inclusion of heterogeneous groups in a gene search. Lung specimens from 23 affected members of 13 families with known FPPH were examined.5 The results demonstrated heterogeneity with coexistence of pathologic lesions within and among families, including microthrombotic and plexiform lesions, in addition to medial hypertrophy and eccentric intimal fibrosis. The types and range of lesions found in these FPPH families were not specific, so they appear to represent different manifestations of a single pathogenetic process. The rarest subsets, pulmonary veno-occlusive disease and pulmonary capillary hemangiomatosis, do have unique clinical and pathologic manifestations, which were not present in any of the families described above. Rare instances of familial clustering of these unique entities have been documented and these conditions probably represent distinctly different disease processes, but their causes are not yet known.


    FPPH: Current Status
 TOP
 Genetics
 FPPH: Lung Pathology
 FPPH: Current Status
 Microsatellite Search Linked a...
 Heterozygous Mutations in Bone...
 Bone Morphogenetic Proteins
 BMPR2 mutations were also...
 A Mutation in BMPR2...
 What Causes PPH in...
 PPH Gene Expression: Microarray...
 Is the Plexiform Lesion...
 Summary
 References
 
PPH in families has been reported from countries all around the world, including Great Britain, France, Norway, Spain, Turkey, Korea, and others. Of the 101 US families with FPPH, most have ethnic heritage from western Europe. FPPH in the United States appears to rarely affect minority populations, with African-American heritage in only three families.

Our PPH database contains records of 207 patients with FPPH, which have occurred among > 2,000 individuals in the 101 families in the United States. Recently, five PPH families in Tennessee were found to have a common ancestor, and together it is now the largest reported family with PPH (Fig 2 ).6 This FPPH kindred has had 18 cases of PPH, including 16 women and 2 men. Among the obligate carriers, ie, individuals who have transmitted disease but are not affected, there are 9 women and 13 men. So the striking influence of gender on expression of the gene defect is shown by the comparison in this family: 16 women affected (9 obligates) and 2 men affected (13 obligates).



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Figure 2.. Pedigree of a large PPH family from Tennessee (TN).

 

    Microsatellite Search Linked a Gene for FPPH in 1997
 TOP
 Genetics
 FPPH: Lung Pathology
 FPPH: Current Status
 Microsatellite Search Linked a...
 Heterozygous Mutations in Bone...
 Bone Morphogenetic Proteins
 BMPR2 mutations were also...
 A Mutation in BMPR2...
 What Causes PPH in...
 PPH Gene Expression: Microarray...
 Is the Plexiform Lesion...
 Summary
 References
 
In 1997, a genome-wide search for FPPH was reported that analyzed a set of highly polymorphic markers in 19 affected individuals from six PPH families, and demonstrated evidence for linkage with markers on chromosome 2q.7 All patients and available family members were then genotyped for 19 additional markers spanning approximately 40 centimorgans on the long arm of chromosome 2. This study demonstrated a maximum two-point logarithm of odds score of 6.97 at {theta} = 0 with the marker D2S389. Multipoint-linkage analysis yielded a maximum score of 7.86 with the marker D2S311. Haplotype analysis established a minimum candidate interval of approximately 25 centimorgans. There was no evidence for locus heterogeneity in any of these six families studied. Another research team8 reported linkage independently at about the same time.


    Heterozygous Mutations in Bone Morphogenetic Protein Receptor 2 CAUSE FPPH
 TOP
 Genetics
 FPPH: Lung Pathology
 FPPH: Current Status
 Microsatellite Search Linked a...
 Heterozygous Mutations in Bone...
 Bone Morphogenetic Proteins
 BMPR2 mutations were also...
 A Mutation in BMPR2...
 What Causes PPH in...
 PPH Gene Expression: Microarray...
 Is the Plexiform Lesion...
 Summary
 References
 
FPPH was recently shown to be caused by mutations in bone morphogenetic protein receptor (BMPR) 2, which is a member of the transforming growth factor (TGF)-ß superfamily.9 The genomic structure of BMPR2 was defined, and seven independent mutations were detected in a cohort of eight PPH kindreds. By comparison to in vitro studies, the identified defects of BMPR2 in FPPH were predicted to disrupt ligand binding, kinase activity, and heterodimer formation. These data demonstrate a molecular basis of FPPH and underscore the importance of the TGF-ß pathway in maintenance of vessel integrity. Another research team10 also reported mutations of BMPR2 in FPPH about the same time.


    Bone Morphogenetic Proteins
 TOP
 Genetics
 FPPH: Lung Pathology
 FPPH: Current Status
 Microsatellite Search Linked a...
 Heterozygous Mutations in Bone...
 Bone Morphogenetic Proteins
 BMPR2 mutations were also...
 A Mutation in BMPR2...
 What Causes PPH in...
 PPH Gene Expression: Microarray...
 Is the Plexiform Lesion...
 Summary
 References
 
Members of the TGF-ß superfamily, including bone morphogenetic proteins (BMPs), transduce signals by binding to heteromeric complexes of type I and type II receptors, activating serine/threonine kinases, leading to transcriptional regulation by phosphorylated Smads. For TGF-ß, sequential binding of the ligand to a type II receptor, which recruits and activates a type I receptor. The intracellular domain of the serine-threonine kinase type I receptor then initiates downstream signaling through phosphorylation of the Smad cytoplasmic transcription factors. BMPs are secreted signaling molecules. Investigation of the > 30 BMPs known to date have demonstrated important roles in development, cell proliferation and differentiation, morphogenesis, and organogenesis. Current opinion suggests that a more appropriate term for this class would be growth and differentiation factors.11 BMPs 2, 4, 6, and 7 signal through the type II receptor, BMPR2.12


    BMPR2 MUTATIONS WERE ALSO FOUND IN SPORADIC PPH
 TOP
 Genetics
 FPPH: Lung Pathology
 FPPH: Current Status
 Microsatellite Search Linked a...
 Heterozygous Mutations in Bone...
 Bone Morphogenetic Proteins
 BMPR2 mutations were also...
 A Mutation in BMPR2...
 What Causes PPH in...
 PPH Gene Expression: Microarray...
 Is the Plexiform Lesion...
 Summary
 References
 
Another investigation2 reported mutations in a group of unrelated PPH patients who had no identifiable family history of pulmonary hypertension. Direct sequencing of the entire coding region and the boundaries of the BMPR2 gene was performed in 50 patients with sporadic PPH. DNA from available parents was used to assess the occurrence of spontaneous (de novo) mutations contributing to sporadic PPH. A total of 13 heterozygous germline mutations of the BMPR2 gene were found among the 50 PPH subjects studied, including missense (n = 3), nonsense (n = 3), and frameshift (n = 7) mutations, each predicted to alter the cell-signaling response to specific ligands. No differences in clinical features or disease progression were seen in PPH patients with or without the germline mutations. The sporadic form of PPH was associated with germline mutations of the gene encoding the receptor protein BMPR2 in at least 26% of these patients.


    A Mutation in BMPR2 HAS BEEN IDENTIFIED IN HALF OF THE PPH FAMILIES
 TOP
 Genetics
 FPPH: Lung Pathology
 FPPH: Current Status
 Microsatellite Search Linked a...
 Heterozygous Mutations in Bone...
 Bone Morphogenetic Proteins
 BMPR2 mutations were also...
 A Mutation in BMPR2...
 What Causes PPH in...
 PPH Gene Expression: Microarray...
 Is the Plexiform Lesion...
 Summary
 References
 
In this study,13 samples from 45 additional families with PPH were analyzed and the entire coding region of the BMPR2 gene and all intron/exon junctions were sequenced in affected individuals. A total of 22 different mutations were identified in 23 of 45 families. All of these mutations were shown to segregate with disease, and none were detected in a panel of 150 normal chromosomes. Most of the mutations (13 of 22 mutations [59%]) are either frameshift (n = 8) or nonsense (n = 5) mutations that would be predicted to lack normal BMPR2 function. These mutations are dispersed throughout the gene with the most 5' frameshift mutation occurring in exon 1 and the most 3' frameshift found in exon 12. The exon 1 frameshift mutation would predict a protein containing only the 15 N-terminal amino acids of BMPR2 with an additional 30 amino acids until the next stop codon. All eight of the frameshift mutations appear to result from slippage or stutter of the polymerase during replication as they occur in regions of small mononucleotide or dinucleotide repeats.


    What Causes PPH in Families in Whom a Mutation in BMPR2 IS NOT IDENTIFIED?
 TOP
 Genetics
 FPPH: Lung Pathology
 FPPH: Current Status
 Microsatellite Search Linked a...
 Heterozygous Mutations in Bone...
 Bone Morphogenetic Proteins
 BMPR2 mutations were also...
 A Mutation in BMPR2...
 What Causes PPH in...
 PPH Gene Expression: Microarray...
 Is the Plexiform Lesion...
 Summary
 References
 
Mutations of BMPR2 have not been reported for nearly half of the known PPH families. It is possible that another gene or genes may cause PPH, or that other mutations, perhaps intronic, in BMPR2 have not yet been identified. Another presentation at this conference suggests that a second locus may exist on the long arm of chromosome 2, and independent confirmation of this finding is awaited with great interest.


    PPH Gene Expression: Microarray Analysis
 TOP
 Genetics
 FPPH: Lung Pathology
 FPPH: Current Status
 Microsatellite Search Linked a...
 Heterozygous Mutations in Bone...
 Bone Morphogenetic Proteins
 BMPR2 mutations were also...
 A Mutation in BMPR2...
 What Causes PPH in...
 PPH Gene Expression: Microarray...
 Is the Plexiform Lesion...
 Summary
 References
 
A recent study14 employed oligonucleotide microarray to examine the expression pattern in lung tissue obtained from six patients with PPH, including two patients with a known family history (FPPH) and six patients with normal lungs. For the data analysis, gene clusters were generated and the gene-expression pattern differences between PPH and normal lung tissue, and between PPH and FPPH lung tissue were compared. Several genes were differentially expressed, and this allowed characterization of the PPH gene-expression pattern as one where genes coding for proteins involved in control of cell growth and apoptosis were abnormal. Importantly, pattern comparison of gene expression also distinguished between sporadic PPH and FPPH, with 39 different genes that were demonstrated to be differentially expressed between sporadic PPH and FPPH. Microarray gene expression appears to be a useful technique that provides better characterization and understanding of the pathobiology of the clinical phenotypes of pulmonary hypertension.


    Is the Plexiform Lesion a Tumorlet? Cell Growth and Molecular Changes in Plexiform Lesions
 TOP
 Genetics
 FPPH: Lung Pathology
 FPPH: Current Status
 Microsatellite Search Linked a...
 Heterozygous Mutations in Bone...
 Bone Morphogenetic Proteins
 BMPR2 mutations were also...
 A Mutation in BMPR2...
 What Causes PPH in...
 PPH Gene Expression: Microarray...
 Is the Plexiform Lesion...
 Summary
 References
 
Plexiform lesions, which are composed of proliferating endothelial cells in clusters are characteristic lesions of PPH. The technology to assess monoclonality has recently developed, and it may help to distinguish cellular proliferation of neoplasia from that in reactive nonneoplastic tissue. To determine whether the endothelial cell proliferation in plexiform lesions of PPH is monoclonal or polyclonal, the methylation pattern of the human androgen-receptor gene by polymerase chain reaction was assessed in proliferative endothelial cells from plexiform lesions from female patients with PPH compared to patients with secondary pulmonary hypertension.15 In patients with PPH, 17 of 22 lesions (77%) were monoclonal. However, in patients with secondary pulmonary hypertension, all 19 lesions examined were polyclonal. Smooth-muscle cell hyperplasia in pulmonary vessels (n = 11) in PPH and secondary pulmonary hypertension was polyclonal in all but one of the examined vessels. It appears that monoclonal expansion of endothelial cells distinguishes between PPH and secondary pulmonary hypertension. Monoclonal endothelial cell proliferation in patients with PPH suggests that a somatic genetic alteration similar to neoplastic processes may contribute to pathogenesis of PPH.

These findings contributed to a hypothesis that endothelial cells within PPH plexiform lesions harbor mutations permissive for clonal cell growth. In another study,16 endothelial cells of PPH plexiform lesions demonstrated microsatellite instability within the human MutS homolog 2 gene (10 of 20 lesions) and displayed microsatellite site mutations and reduced protein expression of TGF-ß–receptor type II (6 of 19 lesions) and Bax (4 of 19 lesions). These results suggest that proliferative endothelial cells of PPH plexiform lesions have genetic alterations associated with microsatellite instability and concomitant perturbation of growth and apoptosis gene expression, similar to pathogenetic features of neoplasia.


    Summary
 TOP
 Genetics
 FPPH: Lung Pathology
 FPPH: Current Status
 Microsatellite Search Linked a...
 Heterozygous Mutations in Bone...
 Bone Morphogenetic Proteins
 BMPR2 mutations were also...
 A Mutation in BMPR2...
 What Causes PPH in...
 PPH Gene Expression: Microarray...
 Is the Plexiform Lesion...
 Summary
 References
 
The identification of BMPR2 as a gene responsible for PPH, in both familial and sporadic disease, provides the first opportunity to understand its central pathogenesis, as well as many other opportunities, such as genetic testing and counseling, and directing the development of novel therapies. In aggregate, the studies described in the discussion above provide convincing evidence that proliferative processes are the central pathogenetic event of PPH. Future research efforts will be directed by many investigators to understand by what mechanisms BMPR2 mutations cause occlusive disease in such a limited segment of the circulation. Other goals for the immediate future should include the identification of genes or conditions that modify the clinical expression of BMPR2 mutations, and possibly other primary genes, which are of enormous interest and importance and surely are realistic at this time.


    Footnotes
 
Abbreviations: BMP = bone morphogenetic protein; BMPR = bone morphogenetic protein receptor; FPPH = familial primary pulmonary hypertension; PPH = primary pulmonary hypertension; TGF = transforming growth factor

Supported by National Institutes of Health grant HL-48164.


    References
 TOP
 Genetics
 FPPH: Lung Pathology
 FPPH: Current Status
 Microsatellite Search Linked a...
 Heterozygous Mutations in Bone...
 Bone Morphogenetic Proteins
 BMPR2 mutations were also...
 A Mutation in BMPR2...
 What Causes PPH in...
 PPH Gene Expression: Microarray...
 Is the Plexiform Lesion...
 Summary
 References
 

  1. Rich, S, Dantzker, DR, Ayres, SM, et al (1987) Primary pulmonary hypertension: a national prospective study. Ann Intern Med 107,216-223
  2. Thompson, JR, Machado, RD, Pauciulo, MW, et al (2000) Sporadic primary pulmonary hypertension is associated with germline mutations of the gene encoding BMPR-II, a receptor member of the TGF-ß family. J Med Genet 37,741-745[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  3. Loyd, JE, Butler, MG, Foroud, TM, et al (1995) Genetic anticipation and abnormal gender ratio at birth in familial primary pulmonary hypertension. Am J Respir Crit Care Med 152,93-97[Abstract]
  4. Hogan, BLM (1996) Bone morphogenetic proteins: multifunctional regulators of vertebrate development. Genes Dev 10,1580-1594[Free Full Text]
  5. Loyd, JE, Atkinson, JB, Virmani, R, et al (1988) Heterogeneity of pathologic lesions in familial PPH. Am Rev Respir Dis 138,952-957[ISI][Medline]
  6. Newman, JH, Wheeler, L, Lane, KB, et al (2001) Mutations in the gene for bone morphogenetic protein receptor II as a cause of primary pulmonary hypertension in a large kindred. N Engl J Med 345,319-24[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  7. Nichols, WC, Koller, DL, Slovis, B, et al (1997) Localization of the gene for familial primary pulmonary hypertension to chromosome 2q31–32. Nat Genet 15,277-281[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
  8. Morse, JH, Jones, AC, Barst, RJ, et al (1997) Mapping of familial primary pulmonary hypertension locus (PPH1) to chromosome 2q31–q32. Circulation 95,2603-2606[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  9. Lane, KB, Machado, RD, Pauciulo, MW, et al (2000) Heterozygous germline mutations in a TGF-ß receptor, BMPR2, are the cause of familial primary pulmonary hypertension. Nat Genet 26,81-84[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
  10. Deng, Z, Morse, JH, Slager, SL, et al (2000) Familial primary pulmonary hypertension (gene PPH1) is caused by mutations in the bone morphogenetic protein receptor-II gene. Am J Hum Genet 67,737-744[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
  11. Ducy, P, Karsenty, G (2000) The family of bone morphogenetic proteins. Kidney Int 57,2207-2214[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
  12. Wilkins, MR, Gibbs, JSR, Shovlin, CL (2000) A gene for primary pulmonary hypertension. Lancet 356,1207-1208[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
  13. Machado, RD, Pauciulo, MW, Thompson, JR, et al (2001) BMPR2 haploinsufficiency as the inherited molecular mechanism for primary pulmonary hypertension. Am J Hum Genet 68,92-102[CrossRef][ISI][Medline]
  14. Geraci, MW, Moore, M, Gesell, T, et al (2001) Gene expression patterns in the lungs of patients with primary pulmonary hypertension: a gene microarray analysis. Circ Res 88,555-562[Abstract/Free Full Text]
  15. Lee, SD, Shroyer, KR, Markham, NE, et al (1998) Monoclonal endothelial cell proliferation is present in primary but not secondary pulmonary hypertension. J Clin Invest 101,927-934[ISI][Medline]
  16. Yeager, ME, Halley, GR, Golpon, HA, et al (2001) Microsatellite instability of endothelial cell growth and apoptosis genes within plexiform lesions in primary pulmonary hypertension. Circ Res 88,E2-E11




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