Epidermolysis bullosa simplex is a group of blistering skin disorders caused by defects in one of the keratin genes, KRT5 and KRT14. Previously reported KRT5 and KRT14 mutations are clustered in several hotspots, namely the rod ends of the 1A and 2B domains and in the non-helical linker region L12.
Identification of a leucine-to-proline mutation in the keratin 5 gene in a family with the generalized Köbner type of epidermolysis bullosa simplex
✍ Scribed by Wei Dong; Markku Ryynänen; Jouni Uitto
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1993
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 796 KB
- Volume
- 2
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1059-7794
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✦ Synopsis
Communicated by Darwin J. Prockop
We have previously reported linkage of a large Finnish family with the generalized (Kobner) type of epidermolysis bullosa simplex to chromosome 12q in the region containing the type I1 keratin gene cluster (Ryynanen et al., Am J Human Genet 49: [978][979][980][981][982][983][984] 1991). In this study, we examined the possibility that keratin 5, the type I1 keratin expressed in the basal keratinocytes, harbors the mutation in this family. Nucleotide sequencing revealed a T-to-C transition within exon 7 of the keratin 5 gene in the affected individuals of the family, while the unaffected individuals showed no evidence of C. The presence of the T-t0-C transition in the affected individuals was confirmed by restriction enzyme digestion analysis with NciI endonuclease, as well as with PCR amplification of specific alleles (PASA) analysis. The PASA analysis also indicated that the mutated allele was not found among the 100 alleles tested within the general Finnish population indicating that the mutated allele is not a common polymorphism. Furthermore, the mutated allele was not present in nine individuals representing three different EBS families of Finnish origin. The T-to-C transition at the nucleotide level resulted in substitution of a leucine by a proline at the amino acid level, and the substitution affected a leucine residue which was invariant among eight different human keratins in a highly conserved segment at the carboxy-terminal region of the keratin 5 polypeptide. I n analogy with previously elucidated mutations in keratins expressed in basal keratinocytes, it is highly probable that the leucine-to-proline substitution in the keratin 5 gene, which completely cosegregated with the clinical phenotype, is the underlying cause of the blistering tendency in this family with EBS of the generalized, Kobner type.
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