Randomization of Left-Right Asymmetry and Congenital Heart Defects

Author:

Nöthe-Menchen Tabea1,Wallmeier Julia1,Pennekamp Petra1,Höben Inga M.1,Olbrich Heike1,Loges Niki T.1,Raidt Johanna1,Dougherty Gerard W.1,Hjeij Rim1,Dworniczak Bernd1,Omran Heymut1,Amirav Israel,Biebach Luisa,Fabricius Dorit,Griese Matthias,Große-Onnebrink Jörg,Häffner Karsten,Hector Andreas,Jung Andreas,Kaiser-Labusch Petra,Kaiser Thomas,Keßler Christina,Kitz Richard,Knowles Michael R.,Koerner-Rettberg Cordula,Kristoffersson Ulf,Leigh Margaret W.,Mertsch Pontus,Mischo Bernhard,Nielsen Kim G.,Poeta Marco,Rietschel Ernst,Roth Samra,Santamaria Francesca,Schmalstieg Christian,Schmidts Miriam,Schwarz Carsten,Schwerk Nicolaus,Seithe Horst,Tebbe Johannes,Werner Claudius,Zariwala Maimoona A.,

Affiliation:

1. Department of General Pediatrics, University Children’s Hospital Muenster, Germany.

Abstract

Background: Nearly one in 100 live births presents with congenital heart defects (CHD). CHD is frequently associated with laterality defects, such as situs inversus , a mirrored positioning of internal organs. Body laterality is established by a complex process: monocilia at the embryonic left-right organizer facilitate both the generation and sensing of a leftward fluid flow. This induces the conserved left-sided Nodal signaling cascade to initiate asymmetrical organogenesis. Primary ciliary dyskinesia originates from dysfunction of motile cilia, causing symptoms such as chronic sinusitis, bronchiectasis and frequently situs inversus totalis . The most frequently mutated gene in primary ciliary dyskinesia, DNAH5 is associated with randomization of body asymmetry resulting in situs inversus totalis in half of the patients; however, its relation to CHD occurrence in humans has not been investigated in detail so far. Methods: We performed genotype/phenotype correlations in 132 patients with primary ciliary dyskinesia carrying disease-causing DNAH5 mutations, focusing on situs defects and CHD. Using high-speed video microscopy-, immunofluorescence-, and in situ hybridization analyses, we investigated the initial steps of left-right axis establishment in embryos of a Dnah5 -mutant mouse model. Results: In patients with primary ciliary dyskinesia carrying disease-causing DNAH5 mutations, 65.9% (87/132) had laterality defects: 88.5% (77/87) presented with situs inversus totalis , 11.5% (10/87) presented with situs ambiguus ; and 6.1% (8/132) presented with CHD. In Dnah5 mut/mut mice, embryonic left-right organizer monocilia lack outer dynein arms resulting in immotile cilia, impaired flow at the left-right organizer, and randomization of Nodal signaling with normal, reversed or bilateral expression of key molecules. Conclusions: For the first time, we directly demonstrate the disease-mechanism of laterality defects linked to DNAH5 deficiency at the molecular level during embryogenesis. We highlight that mutations in DNAH5 are not only associated with classical randomization of left-right body asymmetry but also with severe laterality defects including CHD.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

General Medicine

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