Abstract

Cerebral Cavernous Malformation (CCM) is a vascular disease of proven genetic origin, which may arise sporadically or is inherited as an autosomal dominant condition with incomplete penetrance and highly variable expressivity. CCM lesions exhibit a range of different phenotypes, including wide inter-individual differences in lesion number, size, and susceptibility to intracerebral hemorrhage (ICH). Lesions may remain asymptomatic or result in pathological conditions of various type and severity at any age, with symptoms ranging from recurrent headaches to severe neurological deficits, seizures, and stroke. To date there are no direct therapeutic approaches for CCM disease besides the surgical removal of accessible lesions. Novel pharmacological strategies are particularly needed to limit disease progression and severity and prevent de novo formation of CCM lesions in susceptible individuals.Useful insights into innovative approaches for CCM disease prevention and treatment are emerging from a growing understanding of the biological functions of the three known CCM proteins, CCM1/KRIT1, CCM2 and CCM3/PDCD10. In particular, accumulating evidence indicates that these proteins play major roles in distinct signaling pathways, including those involved in cellular responses to oxidative stress, inflammation and angiogenesis, pointing to pathophysiological mechanisms whereby the function of CCM proteins may be relevant in preventing vascular dysfunctions triggered by these events. Indeed, emerging findings demonstrate that the pleiotropic roles of CCM proteins reflect their critical capacity to modulate the fine-tuned crosstalk between redox signaling and autophagy that govern cell homeostasis and stress responses, providing a novel mechanistic scenario that reconciles both the multiple signaling pathways linked to CCM proteins and the distinct therapeutic approaches proposed so far. In addition, recent studies in CCM patient cohorts suggest that genetic susceptibility factors related to differences in vascular sensitivity to oxidative stress and inflammation contribute to inter-individual differences in CCM disease susceptibility and severity.This review discusses recent progress into the understanding of the molecular basis and mechanisms of CCM disease pathogenesis, with specific emphasis on the potential contribution of altered cell responses to oxidative stress and inflammatory events occurring locally in the microvascular environment, and consequent implications for the development of novel, safe, and effective preventive and therapeutic strategies.

Highlights

  • The scientific advances and breakthroughs into the physiopathological functions of cerebral cavernous malformation (CCM) proteins outlined in this review bring into view a new mechanistic landscape in which defective autophagy and altered redox signaling emerge as the major molecular mechanisms that underlie the pleiotropic effects of CCM protein dysfunctions, whereas oxidative stress and inflammation loom large as the key pathogenic determinants of CCM disease onset and progression

  • It is noteworthy that recent population-based cohort studies have suggested that CCM disease pathogenesis involves an intricate interplay between multiple factors, including genetic and environmental risk factors associated with enhanced susceptibility to oxidative stress and inflammation (Choquet et al, 2014a, b, 2016; Trapani and Retta, 2015)

  • The possibility that local oxidative stress and inflammation events are the key focal determinants of lesion development and may act in concert to drive CCM pathogenesis can explain the clear discrepancy between the pan-endothelial loss of CCM proteins and the focal nature of CCM lesions in neonatal mouse models (Boulday et al, 2011; Chan et al, 2011)

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Summary

Introduction

The functional significance of the contrasting effects of complete (Fisher et al, 2015) and partial (Zhou et al, 2016) endothelial-specific loss of MEKK3 on ICH and brain blood vessels leakage in neonatal mouse models remains ambiguous and open to distinct interpretations (see Section 7) In this intricate mechanistic scenario, a further level of complexity is added by the discovery that CCM proteins modulate distinct redox-sensitive signaling pathways and mechanisms, including pro-oxidant and antioxidant pathways and autophagy (Gibson et al, 2015; Goitre et al, 2010, 2014; Guazzi et al, 2012; Marchi et al, 2015), and are implicated in molecular and cellular responses to oxidative stress and inflammatory stimuli (Corr et al, 2012; Goitre et al, 2014).

CCM proteins regulate the inflammatory response
Role of inflammation in CCM pathogenesis
Role of angiogenesis in CCM pathogenesis
Findings
Concluding remarks
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