Janus-faced EPHB4-associated disorders: novel pathogenic variants and unreported intrafamilial overlapping phenotypes

  • Silvia Martin-Almedina (Shared first author)
  • Kazim Ogmen (Shared first author)
  • Ege Sackey (Shared first author)
  • Dionysios Grigoriadis
  • Christina Karapouliou
  • Noeline Nadarajah
  • Cathrine Ebbing
  • Jenny Lord
  • Rhiannon Mellis
  • Fanny Kortuem
  • Mary Beth Dinulos
  • Cassandra Polun
  • Sherri Bale
  • Giles Atton
  • Alexandra Robinson
  • Hallvard Reigstad
  • Gunnar Houge
  • Axel von der Wense
  • Wolf-Henning Becker
  • Steve Jeffery
  • Peter S Mortimer
  • Kristiana Gordon
  • Katherine S Josephs
  • Sarah Robart
  • Mark D Kilby
  • Stephanie Vallee
  • Jerome L Gorski
  • Maja Hempel
  • Siren Berland
  • Sahar Mansour
  • Pia Ostergaard

Related Research units

Abstract

PURPOSE: Several clinical phenotypes including fetal hydrops, central conducting lymphatic anomaly or capillary malformations with arteriovenous malformations 2 (CM-AVM2) have been associated with EPHB4 (Ephrin type B receptor 4) variants, demanding new approaches for deciphering pathogenesis of novel variants of uncertain significance (VUS) identified in EPHB4, and for the identification of differentiated disease mechanisms at the molecular level.

METHODS: Ten index cases with various phenotypes, either fetal hydrops, CM-AVM2, or peripheral lower limb lymphedema, whose distinct clinical phenotypes are described in detail in this study, presented with a variant in EPHB4. In vitro functional studies were performed to confirm pathogenicity.

RESULTS: Pathogenicity was demonstrated for six of the seven novel EPHB4 VUS investigated. A heterogeneity of molecular disease mechanisms was identified, from loss of protein production or aberrant subcellular localization to total reduction of the phosphorylation capability of the receptor. There was some phenotype-genotype correlation; however, previously unreported intrafamilial overlapping phenotypes such as lymphatic-related fetal hydrops (LRFH) and CM-AVM2 in the same family were observed.

CONCLUSION: This study highlights the usefulness of protein expression and subcellular localization studies to predict EPHB4 variant pathogenesis. Our accurate clinical phenotyping expands our interpretation of the Janus-faced spectrum of EPHB4-related disorders, introducing the discovery of cases with overlapping phenotypes.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
ISSN1098-3600
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 07.2021
PubMed 33864021