2015
DOI: 10.1016/j.ejmg.2015.10.009
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Cervical artery dissections and type A aortic dissection in a family with a novel missense COL3A1 mutation of vascular type Ehlers–Danlos syndrome

Abstract: a b s t r a c tCervical artery dissection (CeAD) is a rare condition. One of the causes is the vascular type of Ehlers eDanlos syndrome (vEDS). A novel missense mutation in COL3A1 was found in a young patient with CeAD as the single manifestation of vEDS. This is a heterozygous c.953G > A mutation in exon 14, disrupting the normal Gly-X-Y repeats of type III procollagen, by converting glycine to aspartic acid.

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Cited by 6 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…The association between CeAD and rare genetic variants affecting cardiovascular system development observed in our study is in agreement with earlier findings of rare COL3A1 and TGFBR2 mutations in some patients [23-26]. Moreover, our pilot study of 70 CeAD patients revealed a rare CNV of the COL3A1/COL5A2 locus and some additional CNVs affecting cardiovascular system development or muscle organ development [7].…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 92%
“…The association between CeAD and rare genetic variants affecting cardiovascular system development observed in our study is in agreement with earlier findings of rare COL3A1 and TGFBR2 mutations in some patients [23-26]. Moreover, our pilot study of 70 CeAD patients revealed a rare CNV of the COL3A1/COL5A2 locus and some additional CNVs affecting cardiovascular system development or muscle organ development [7].…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 92%
“…Multiple case reports underline the importance of consideration of underlying collagen vascular disease in young patients with unexplained vascular anomalies 15. Arterial complications (including dissection of the abdominal/thoracic aortic, coronary, carotid, subclavian, vertebral, cervical, renal and iliac arteries) have been reported in patients with already diagnosed or previously undiagnosed vEDS 15–23. Often further review of family history will reveal a history of arterial dissections or sudden death in family members24 although notably, there can be significant phenotypic variance in disease presentation in family members.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A vEDS-causing gene, COL3A1, is also among those referenced as dissection associated ones, due to the supporting literature data on population studies and case reports. The dissection was found to develop in different locations of the arterial tree, such as the abdominal aorta, as well as the iliac, coronary, and cervical arteries [ 103 , 104 , 105 , 106 ]. Concerning syndromic TAA in patients diagnosed as vEDS, few post-mortem cases were reported in 2010 [ 107 ], and 33 unrelated individuals or families were found to carry COL3A1 splicing mutations or small deletions partially removing splice-junctions sequences [ 108 ], and patients developing post-surgical or sudden aortic events are reported [ 109 , 110 , 111 ].…”
Section: Mechanisms Of Taa Progression: the Dissection Menacementioning
confidence: 99%