The constitutive desmosomal plaque protein desmoplakin plays a vital part in keratinocyte adhesion in linking the transmembranous desmosomal cadherins to the cytoplasmic keratin filament network. Recently, mutations in desmoplakin have been shown to underlie some cases of the autosomal dominant disorder, striate palmoplantar keratoderma, as well as an autosomal recessive condition characterized by dilated cardiomyopathy, woolly hair, and keratoderma. Here, we describe two unrelated individuals with a new autosomal recessive genodermatosis characterized by focal and diffuse palmoplantar keratoderma, hyperkeratotic plaques on the trunk and limbs, varying degrees of alopecia, but no apparent cardiac anomalies. Mutation screening of desmoplakin demonstrated compound heterozygosity for a non-sense/mis-sense combination of mutations in both cases, C809X/N287K and Q664X/R2366C, respectively. Heterozygous carriers of any of these mutations displayed no phenotypic abnormalities. Immunohistochemistry of skin biopsies from both affected individuals revealed that desmoplakin was not just located at the cell periphery but there was also cytoplasmic staining. In addition, electron microscopy demonstrated acantholysis throughout all layers of the skin, focal detachment of desmosomes into the intercellular spaces, and perinuclear condensation of the suprabasal keratin intermediate filament network. Clinicopathologic and mutational analyses therefore demonstrate that desmoplakin haploinsufficiency can be tolerated in some cases, but that in combination with a mis-sense mutation on the other allele, the consequences are a severe genodermatosis with specific clinical manifestations.
Epidermolysis bullosa (EB) with late-onset muscular dystrophy (EB-MD) is a hemidesmosomal variant of EB due to mutations in the plectin gene (PLEC1). The age of onset of muscle involvement has been noted to vary from infancy to the fourth decade of life. Immunofluorescence of the patients' skin and muscle biopsies is usually negative for staining with antibodies recognizing plectin, a large cytoskeleton-associated anchorage protein. In this study we report novel plectin mutations in two families with EB. In both families, the proband was a newborn with neonatal blistering with no evidence for muscle weakness as yet. Peripheral blood DNA was isolated and examined by heteroduplex scanning strategy, protein truncation test (PTT), and/or direct sequencing of the plectin gene. One of the probands was compound heterozygote for nonsense mutations E2005X/K4460X, and the proband in the second family was compound heterozygote for deletion mutations 5083delG/2745-9del21, the latter mutation extending from -9 to +12 at the intron 22/exon 23 border. The mutations K4460X and 5083delG were not present in either one of the parents, thus being de novo events. In both cases, nonpaternity was excluded by microsatellite marker analysis. The stop codon mutations are predicted to result in the synthesis of a truncated protein lacking the carboxy-terminal globular domain of the protein and possibly causing nonsense-mediated decay of the corresponding mRNA. The 2745-9del21 deletion mutation abolishes the splice site at the intron 22/exon 23 junction, predicting abnormal splicing events. Because plectin deficiency is associated with muscular dystrophy, molecular diagnostics of the plectin gene provides prognostic value in evaluation of these patients who appear to be at risk to develop muscular dystrophy.
We report an infant with depressed, hypopigmented, linear plaques of congenital onset on the lower extremity. The lesions were asymptomatic and the child was otherwise healthy. Despite the clinically obvious change in skin texture and color, histopathologic changes were subtle: a biopsy specimen showed hypopigmentation and a decrease in elastic fibers in the papillary and upper reticular dermis. Diagnoses considered included various congenital syndromes, idiopathic atrophoderma of Pasini and Pierini, and especially, linear atrophoderma of Moulin. However, because of the significant clinical and histopathologic differences when compared to the aforementioned entities, our patient appears to have a unique presentation of congenital linear atrophoderma.
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