A mouse model of Adams-Oliver Syndrome reveals defective Notch1 signaling in endothelial cells as a driver of pathogenesis

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Abstract

Adams-Oliver Syndrome (AOS) is a rare congenital disorder characterized by scalp, limb, and cardiovascular defects. While variants in the NOTCH1 receptor, DLL4 ligand, and RBPJ transcription factor have been implicated in AOS, the driving tissue types and molecular mechanisms by which these variants cause pathogenesis are unknown. Here, we used quantitative binding assays to show that AOS-associated RBPJ missense variants compromise DNA binding but not cofactor binding. These findings suggest that AOS-associated RBPJ variants do not function as loss-of-function alleles but instead act as dominant-negative proteins that sequester cofactors from DNA. Consistent with this idea, mice carrying an AOS-associated Rbpj allele develop dominant phenotypes that include lethality and cardiovascular defects in a Notch1 heterozygous background, whereas Notch1 and Rbpj compound heterozygous null alleles are well-tolerated. To facilitate studies into the key tissues driving AOS pathogenesis, we employed conditional genetics to isolate the contribution of the vasculature to the development of AOS-like phenotypes. Importantly, our studies show that expression of the Rbpj AOS allele in endothelial cells is both necessary and sufficient to cause lethality and cardiovascular defects. These data establish that defective Notch1 signaling in the vasculature is a key driver of pathogenesis in this AOS mouse model.

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