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Peer-reviewed veterinary case report

Impaired nuclear PTEN function drives macrocephaly, lymphadenopathy and late-onset cancer in PTEN hamartoma tumour syndrome.

Journal:
Disease models & mechanisms
Year:
2026
Authors:
Tibarewal, Priyanka et al.
Affiliation:
Cancer Institute · United Kingdom
Species:
rodent

Abstract

PTEN hamartoma tumour syndrome (PHTS), a rare disease caused by germline heterozygous PTEN variants, is associated with multi-organ/tissue overgrowth, autism spectrum disorder and increased cancer risk. Phenotypic variability in PHTS is partly due to diverse PTEN variants and the protein's multifaceted functions. PTEN is primarily a phosphatidylinositol(3,4,5)trisphosphate (PIP3) phosphatase regulating PI3K/AKT signalling but also maintains chromosomal stability through nuclear functions such as double-stranded (ds)DNA damage repair. Here, we show that PTEN-R173C, a pathogenic variant frequently found in PHTS and somatic cancer, has elevated PIP3 phosphatase activity that effectively regulates canonical PI3K/AKT signalling. However, PTEN-R173C is unstable and excluded from the nucleus. We generated Pten+/R173C mice which developed few tumours during their lifetime, aligning with normal PI3K/AKT signalling. However, they exhibited lymphoid hyperplasia, macrocephaly and brain abnormalities, associated with impaired nuclear functions of PTEN-R173C, demonstrated by reduced dsDNA damage repair. We integrated PHTS patient data with our mouse model results, and propose that defective nuclear functions of PTEN variants can predict the onset of PHTS phenotypes and that late-onset cancer in these individuals may arise from secondary genetic alterations, facilitated by compromised dsDNA repair.

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Original publication: https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/41215730/