Myhre syndrome

Myhre syndrome
Other namesLAPS syndrome, Laryngotracheal stenosis, Arthropathy, Prognathism, and Short stature syndrome
Myhre syndrome is inherited in an autosomal dominant manner
SpecialtyMedical genetics

Myhre syndrome (MS) is an ultrarare genetic disorder caused by dominant gain-of-function (GOF) mutations in the SMAD4 gene. MS mutations are missense heterozygous mutations affecting only Ile500 or Arg496 residues of the SMAD4 protein. MS patients exhibit manifestations of connective tissue disease including dysfunction of the integumentary, cardiovascular, respiratory, gastrointestinal, and musculoskeletal systems and is often characterized by proliferative systemic fibrosis. Some of these features are life threatening, such as airway or arterial narrowing (laryngotracheal stenosis or aortic coarctation) and fibroproliferation of tissues including lung, heart, and liver. Consistent with these clinical observations, cells isolated from patients with MS demonstrate increased TGF-β signaling.

In contrast, loss-of-function (LOF) mutations in SMAD4 predispose individuals to gastrointestinal polyps, a higher risk of colorectal cancer, and a risk of forming arteriovenous malformations (AVM) a hallmark manifestation of hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia (HHT). Patients also have external phenotypes similar to Marfan syndrome.

Biologically, SMAD4 plays a prominent role in both canonical TGF-β and other TGF-β superfamily signaling. The systemic manifestations of these two disorders suggest opposite biologic effects, such as the finding of aortic aneurysm in SMAD4-JP-HHT (LOF of SMAD4) versus the aortic hypoplasia seen in Myhre syndrome (GOF in SMAD4).