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DENTAL NEWS ARCHIVES 110 |
Scientists Discover First Gene Involved In Gum OvergrowthApril 2, 2002 BETHESDA, MD (NIH) -- Dental researchers have known for decades that some people are born with gums that grow abnormally over their teeth. What they have never known is why? Now, in this month's issue of the "American Journal of Human Genetics", dental researchers
have their first clue. An international team of scientists reports that it has identified the
first gene that, when altered, triggers hereditary gingival fibromatosis, or HGF, the most common of these rare, inherited gum conditions. Interestingly, the researchers note that the
gene, called SOS1, encodes a protein that is known to activate the "ras" pathway, one of the
key growth signals in our cells. The authors say this finding suggests that, when the SOS1 gene
is "not" mutated, its protein and the "ras" pathway likely are involved in the normal growth of healthy gums, or gingiva, an idea that was previously unknown. If confirmed, they say, learning how to turn on relevant portions of the pathway, like flipping a biological switch, might help dentists one day regenerate the gingiva naturally in people with receding gums or
advanced periodontal disease. Conversely, by switching off the growth signal, dentists could
prevent gingival overgrowth, meaning people with HGF might not need to have the excess tissue
surgically cut away, now the standard treatment. "This is yet another example of the
importance of studying rare genetic diseases," said Dr. Thomas Hart, lead author on the study
and a scientist at the University of Pittsburgh School of Dental Medicine. "By identifying a gene involved in hereditary gingival fibromatosis, it was possible to uncover a key clue into normal gingival development, a clue that could have important implications for dentistry." Hart and his colleagues add that the discovery also could have important research implications for the gingival overgrowth that occurs in a number of human syndromes or as a side effect of certain frequently prescribed medications. These medications include: phenytoin for seizures, calcium channel blockers for hypertension, and cyclosporine for autoimmune diseases. Researchers estimate that gingival overgrowth affects about 15 percent of people who use phenytoin, around 15 percent of those who take calcium channel blockers, and approximately 30 percent of people who use cyclosporine. For organ transplant patients who combine cyclosporine and nifedipine, about 40 percent have gingival overgrowth. According to Hart, given the dearth of molecular information available on gingival overgrowth, HGF was a good place to start the search for clues. The condition was clearly genetic in origin, and, by the early 1990s, the tools were at hand to more efficiently track down inherited disease genes. What was lacking was a large family somewhere in the world with a long history of HGF, meaning many members of the family shared a gene mutation whose location in the human genome might be trackable. In 1992, that family entered the picture when a woman walked into the University of Taubate dental clinic in Brazil to have her overgrown gingiva cut away from her teeth. Drs. Deborah Pallos and Jose Roberto Cortelli, after further consultation, correctly determined that the woman had HGF. Then, in close collaboration with Hart and his colleagues in the United States, the Brazilian scientists spent the next few years compiling an initial, 32-member family tree, recording each affected and unaffected member over three generations. In 1998, after analyzing the DNA from many
members of the family, the team reported that
those affected shared an irregularity on the
short arm of chromosome 2. But the researchers
still didn't know exactly where the irregularity
was on the short arm. As Hart said, this was no
trivial matter. The segment of the chromosome in
question was found to contain 33 genes, any of
which could be causing the gingival overgrowth,
and they were spread out over nearly 5 million
bases, or units, of DNA. To hasten and narrow their search, the
scientists contacted additional family members,
collecting DNA samples and performing oral
examinations on, in total, 83 family members
spanning four generations. Meanwhile, Hart's
laboratory sequenced -- or arranged in order --
the five million bases in the region. By knowing
the precise, highly repetitive order of the four
possible bases, represented by the letters A, T,
C, and G, the scientists hoped that, if needed,
they would be able to detect even a single,
one-letter typo in the sequence. As reported in this month's article, the
group's careful attention to detail paid off.
Hart and colleagues found that the 38 family
members with HGF shared a single one- letter
change in the sequence of the previously mapped
son of sevenless (SOS1) gene. Present in
organisms on all rungs of the evolutionary
ladder, the SOS1 protein complexes with other
molecules in our cells to activate the "ras"
signaling pathway, a much-studied topic in
cancer research. This ancient biochemical
signal, once activated and processed, can prompt
our cells to grow, differentiate, or even commit
suicide, tasks that are essential to life. Hart said this single nucleotide change
scrambled some of the genetic code required to
produce a normal SOS1 protein. As a result,
family members with HGF have shortened,
abnormally shaped SOS1 proteins present in cells
throughout their bodies, not just the gingiva.
This raises the question of why this mutation
would affect the gingiva only? Given the
fundamental importance of the "ras" pathway to
life, wouldn't the change in the SOS1 protein
lead to birth defects or an inherited
susceptibility to tumors throughout the body?
However, according to Hart, family members
with HGF do not seem to be susceptible to other
developmental abnormalities or cancer. "This
might speak to the developmental uniqueness of
the gingiva, which clearly has a novel pattern
of gene and protein expression. Or, it might
speak to the redundancy of signaling systems in
our cells as a whole. But we really don't know,
though biologically it is an extremely
interesting lead that shows the power of genetic
approaches in dental research." Hart's study, which was supported by the
NIH's National Institute of Dental and
Craniofacial Research, is being published in the
April issue of the "American Journal of Human
Genetics". The paper is titled, "A mutation in
the SOS1 gene causes hereditary gingival
fibromatosis type I." The authors are: Thomas C.
Hart, Yingze Zhang, Michael C. Gorry, P. Suzanne
Hart, Margaret Cooper, Mary L. Marazita, Jared
M. Marks, Jose R Cortelli, and Deborah Pallos.
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