6533b7d7fe1ef96bd1267cad

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Identification of novel mutations in the ABCA12 gene, c.1857delA and c.5653–5655delTAT, causing harlequin ichthyosis

Catharina WhybraOliver BartschDoris MacchiellaEva MildenbergerUlrich ZechnerCornelia PoaranganJohannes Follmann

subject

Pathologymedicine.medical_specialtyCongenital ichthyosiform erythrodermaDNA Mutational AnalysisBiologyModels BiologicalPolymorphism Single NucleotideUltrasonography PrenatalExonFatal OutcomePregnancyCongenital ichthyosisGeneticsmedicineHumansABCA12Sequence DeletionGeneticsInfant NewbornEctropionGeneral MedicineLamellar ichthyosisHarlequin Ichthyosismedicine.diseaseEclabiumbiology.proteinATP-Binding Cassette TransportersFemalemedicine.symptomIchthyosis Lamellar

description

Abstract Harlequin ichthyosis (HI) is a severe autosomal recessive developmental disorder of the skin that is frequently but not always fatal in the first few days of life. In HI, mutations in both ABCA12 gene alleles must have a severe impact on protein function and most mutations are truncating. The presence of at least one nontruncating mutation (predicting a residual protein function) usually causes a less severe congenital ichthyosis (lamellar ichthyosis or congenital ichthyosiform erythroderma). Here we report on a girl with severe HI diagnosed by prenatal ultrasound at 33 5/7 week gestation. Ultrasound findings included ectropion, eclabium, deformed nose, hands and feet, joint contractures, hyperechogenic amniotic fluid and polyhydramnion. After birth, palliative treatment was provided and she died on her first day of life. Sequence analysis of the ABCA12 gene identified two novel mutations, c.1857delA (predicting p.Lys619*) in exon 15 and c.5653–5655delTAT (predicting p.1885delTyr) in exon 37, each in heterozygous state. The c.5653–5655delTAT mutation is not truncating, but the deleted tyrosine at position 1885 is perfectly conserved among vertebrates and molecular studies evaluated the mutation as probably disease causing and damaging.

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gene.2013.07.046