The present study provides evidence that infection with a periodontal pathogen, such as P. gingivalis, may play a role in the pathogenesis of CNS inflammatory disorders such as MS.
Lipoid proteinosis (LP) (OMIM 247100) is a rare, autosomal recessive disorder. Recent studies have shown that LP is the result of reduced expression of the extracellular matrix protein gene (ECM-1), in which loss-of-function mutations have been described. In the present report, we describe a large consanguineous family with LP. We identified a homozygous splice-site mutation in intron 1 (IVS1 + 1G-->C) in three clinically affected patients. This is the first splice-site mutation reported in LP and is the most 5' of all ECM-1 mutations described thus far. It is predicted to result in the removal of the translation initiation site, thus ablating all three known ECM-1 isoforms (ECM-1a, ECM-1b, and ECM-1c). In addition, we found a novel splicing variant that is not associated with the disease (DQ010946) and results in the generation of a short, prematurely terminating transcript. This case further emphasizes the role of ECM-1 in LP and highlights the unresolved genotype-phenotype correlation in this disease.
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