We describe an Israeli Jewish Moroccan family presenting with autosomal dominant seborrhea-like dermatosis with psoriasiform elements, including enhanced keratinocyte proliferation, parakeratosis, follicular plugging, Pityrosporum ovale overgrowth and dermal CD4 lymphocyte infiltrate. We mapped the disease gene to a 0.5-cM region overlapping the PSORS2 locus (17q25) and identified a frameshift mutation in ZNF750, which encodes a putative C2H2 zinc finger protein. ZNF750 is normally expressed in keratinocytes but not in fibroblasts and is barely detectable in CD4 lymphocytes.
Autosomal recessive Adams-Oliver syndrome was diagnosed in three remotely related Bedouin consanguineous families. Genome-wide linkage analysis ruled out association with known Adams-Oliver syndrome genes, identifying a singlehomozygosity B1.8-Mb novel locus common to affected individuals (LOD score 3.37). Whole-exome sequencing followed by Sanger sequencing identified only a single mutation within this locus, shared by all affected individuals and found in patients from five additional apparently unrelated Bedouin families: a 1-bp deletion mutation in a predicted alternative splice variant of EOGT, leading to a putative truncated protein. RT-PCR demonstrated that the EOGT-predicted alternative splice variant is ubiquitously expressed. EOGT encodes EGF-domain-specific O-linked N-acetylglucosamine transferase, responsible for extracellular O-GlcNAcylation of epidermal growth factor-like domain-containing proteins, and is essential for epithelial cell-matrix interactions. F-actin staining in diseased fibroblasts showed apparently intact cell cytoskeleton and morphology, suggesting the EOGT mutation acts not through perturbation of cytoskeleton but through other mechanisms yet to be elucidated.
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