Epidermolysis bullosa simplex with mottled pigmentation (EBS-MP) is a rare dermatologic disorder of autosomal dominant inheritance with intraepidermal blistering after minor trauma, reticular hyperpigmentation unrelated to the blistering, nail dystrophy, and mild palmoplantar keratosis. Keratin 5 an
Molecular confirmation of the unique phenotype of epidermolysis bullosa simplex with mottled pigmentation
β Scribed by A.D. Irvine; E.L. Rugg; E.B. Lane; S. Hoare; C. Peret; A.E. Hughes; A.H. Heagerty
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2001
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 689 KB
- Volume
- 144
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0007-0963
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β¦ Synopsis
Background:
A distinctive subtype of epidermolysis bullosa simplex, with the additional feature of mottled pigmentation (ebs-mp), was initially characterized in a swedish family in 1979, and seven further families have been reported. features of ebs-mp that are observed in most affected patients include acral blistering early in childhood, mottled pigmentation distributed in a number of sites, focal punctate hyperkeratoses of the palms and soles, and dystrophic, thickened nails. the genetic basis of ebs-mp has been ascribed in five unrelated families to a heterozygous point mutation, p25l, in the non-helical v1 domain of k5.
Objectives:
We report a clinical, ultrastructural and molecular study of two of the earliest families to be clinically characterized as ebs-mp.
Methods:
The p25l mutation was identified in all affected members of each of these families, bringing the total number of ebs-mp families with this mutation to seven.
Results:
This unusual recurrent mutation may uniquely cause ebs-mp.
Conclusions:
While the exact molecular mechanisms by which this mutation causes epidermolysis, palmoplantar keratoderma and pigmentation remain elusive, we suggest possible molecular mechanisms through which the p25l substitution could cause this unusual phenotype.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
The clinical features of the Dowling-Meara variant of epidermolysis bullosa simplex (EBS-DM) can, in an infant, be indistinguishable from other severe forms of epidermolysis bullosa (EB). Two unrelated infants with no family history of skin disease are described who, within hours of birth, developed
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.
## 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][