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Mutations in the facilitative glucose transporter GLUT10 alter angiogenesis and cause arterial tortuosity syndrome
Authors:Coucke Paul J  Willaert Andy  Wessels Marja W  Callewaert Bert  Zoppi Nicoletta  De Backer Julie  Fox Joyce E  Mancini Grazia M S  Kambouris Marios  Gardella Rita  Facchetti Fabio  Willems Patrick J  Forsyth Ramses  Dietz Harry C  Barlati Sergio  Colombi Marina  Loeys Bart  De Paepe Anne
Institution:Center for Medical Genetics, Ghent University, B-9000 Ghent, Belgium. paul.coucke@ugent.be
Abstract:Arterial tortuosity syndrome (ATS) is an autosomal recessive disorder characterized by tortuosity, elongation, stenosis and aneurysm formation in the major arteries owing to disruption of elastic fibers in the medial layer of the arterial wall. Previously, we used homozygosity mapping to map a candidate locus in a 4.1-Mb region on chromosome 20q13.1 (ref. 2). Here, we narrowed the candidate region to 1.2 Mb containing seven genes. Mutations in one of these genes, SLC2A10, encoding the facilitative glucose transporter GLUT10, were identified in six ATS families. GLUT10 deficiency is associated with upregulation of the TGFbeta pathway in the arterial wall, a finding also observed in Loeys-Dietz syndrome, in which aortic aneurysms associate with arterial tortuosity. The identification of a glucose transporter gene responsible for altered arterial morphogenesis is notable in light of the previously suggested link between GLUT10 and type 2 diabetes. Our data could provide new insight on the mechanisms causing microangiopathic changes associated with diabetes and suggest that therapeutic compounds intervening with TGFbeta signaling represent a new treatment strategy.
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