A homozygous stop-gain variant in ARHGAP42 is associated with childhood interstitial lung disease, systemic hypertension, and immunological findings

Author:

Li QifeiORCID,Dibus MichalORCID,Casey AliciaORCID,Yee Christina S. K.ORCID,Vargas Sara O.,Luo ShiyuORCID,Rosen Samantha M.ORCID,Madden Jill A.ORCID,Genetti Casie A.ORCID,Brabek Jan,Brownstein Catherine A.ORCID,Kazerounian Shideh,Raby Benjamin A.ORCID,Schmitz-Abe Klaus,Kennedy John C.ORCID,Fishman Martha P.,Mullen Mary P.ORCID,Taylor Joan M.ORCID,Rosel Daniel,Agrawal Pankaj B.ORCID

Abstract

ARHGAP42 encodes Rho GTPase activating protein 42 that belongs to a member of the GTPase Regulator Associated with Focal Adhesion Kinase (GRAF) family. ARHGAP42 is involved in blood pressure control by regulating vascular tone. Despite these findings, disorders of human variants in the coding part of ARHGAP42 have not been reported. Here, we describe an 8-year-old girl with childhood interstitial lung disease (chILD), systemic hypertension, and immunological findings who carries a homozygous stop-gain variant (c.469G>T, p.(Glu157Ter)) in the ARHGAP42 gene. The family history is notable for both parents with hypertension. Histopathological examination of the proband lung biopsy showed increased mural smooth muscle in small airways and alveolar septa, and concentric medial hypertrophy in pulmonary arteries. ARHGAP42 stop-gain variant in the proband leads to exon 5 skipping, and reduced ARHGAP42 levels, which was associated with enhanced RhoA and Cdc42 expression. This is the first report linking a homozygous stop-gain variant in ARHGAP42 with a chILD disorder, systemic hypertension, and immunological findings in human patient. Evidence of smooth muscle hypertrophy on lung biopsy and an increase in RhoA/ROCK signaling in patient cells suggests the potential mechanistic link between ARHGAP42 deficiency and the development of chILD disorder.

Funder

National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases of National Institute of Health

Research of the Cancer Microenvironment Supporting Cancer Growth and Spread

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Subject

Cancer Research,Genetics(clinical),Genetics,Molecular Biology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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