6533b855fe1ef96bd12afd71

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Autosomal-recessive SASH1 variants associated with a new genodermatosis with pigmentation defects, palmoplantar keratoderma and skin carcinoma

Christel ThauvinMarie Hélène Aubriot-lortonNadège GigotNathalie MarleBernard AralLaurence DuplombAlain SarasinJulien ThevenonValeria NaimJean-baptiste RivièreJean Benoît CourcetPierre VabresJamal Eddin AbridMariam TajirLaurence FaivreEmilie Courcet-degrolardSiham Chafai ElalaouiLaurent MartinAbdelaziz SefianiYannis Duffourd

subject

AdultMaleSkin NeoplasmsDNA Mutational AnalysisMutation MissenseGenes RecessiveConsanguinityBiologyArticleConsanguinityKeratoderma PalmoplantarGeneticsmedicineHumansExomeGenetic Predisposition to DiseaseGenetics (clinical)Pigmentation disorderSkinFamily HealthGeneticsSiblingsTumor Suppressor ProteinsHomozygoteGenodermatosisSequence Analysis DNAFibroblastsmedicine.diseaseDisease gene identificationHyperpigmentationPedigreePalmoplantar keratodermaFemaleSkin cancermedicine.symptomSkin CarcinomaPigmentation Disorders

description

SASH1 (SAM and SH3 domain-containing protein 1) is a tumor suppressor gene involved in the tumorigenesis of a spectrum of solid cancers. Heterozygous SASH1 variants are known to cause autosomal-dominant dyschromatosis. Homozygosity mapping and whole-exome sequencing were performed in a consanguineous Moroccan family with two affected siblings presenting an unclassified phenotype associating an abnormal pigmentation pattern (hypo- and hyperpigmented macules of the trunk and face and areas of reticular hypo- and hyperpigmentation of the extremities), alopecia, palmoplantar keratoderma, ungueal dystrophy and recurrent spinocellular carcinoma. We identified a homozygous variant in SASH1 (c.1849G>A; p.Glu617Lys) in both affected individuals. Wound-healing assay showed that the patient's fibroblasts were better able than control fibroblasts to migrate. Following the identification of SASH1 heterozygous variants in dyschromatosis, we used reverse phenotyping to show that autosomal-recessive variants of this gene could be responsible for an overlapping but more complex phenotype that affected skin appendages. SASH1 should be added to the list of genes responsible for autosomal-dominant and -recessive genodermatosis, with no phenotype in heterozygous patients in the recessive form, and to the list of genes responsible for a predisposition to skin cancer.

https://doi.org/10.1038/ejhg.2014.213