4.7 Article

Netherton syndrome:: Disease expression and spectrum of SPINK5 mutations in 21 families

Journal

JOURNAL OF INVESTIGATIVE DERMATOLOGY
Volume 118, Issue 2, Pages 352-361

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1046/j.1523-1747.2002.01603.x

Keywords

atopy; epidermal differentiation; erythroderma; ichthyosis; serine protease inhibitor

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Netherton syndrome is a severe autosomal recessive skin disorder characterized by congenital erythroderma, a specific hair-shaft abnormality, and atopic manifestations with high IgE levels. Recently, we identified SPINK5, which encodes the serine protease inhibitor Kazal-type 5 protein (LEKTI), as the defective gene in Netherton syndrome. Here we describe the intron-exon organization of the gene and characterize the SPINK5 mutations in patients from 21 families of different geographic origin, using denaturing high performance liquid chromatography and direct sequencing. We identified 18 mutations, of which 13 were novel and seven (39%) were recurrent. The majority of the mutations were clustered between exons 1-8 and exons 21-26. They comprised four nonsense mutations (22%), eight frameshift insertions or deletions (44%), and six splice-site defects (33%). All mutations predict the formation of premature termination codons. Northern blot analysis showed variable reduction of SPINK5 mutant transcript levels, suggesting variable efficiency of nonsense-mediated mRNA decay. Seven patients were homozygotes, eight were compound heterozygotes, and five were heterozygotes with only one identifiable SPINK5 mutation. Five mutations, one of which resulted in perinatal lethal disease in three families, were associated with certain ethnic groups. We also describe 45 intragenic polymorphisms in the patients studied. The clinical features of erythroderma, trichorrhexis invaginata, and atopic manifestations were present in the majority of affected individuals and ichthyosis linearis circumflexa was seen in 12 out of 24 patients. Interfamilial and intrafamilial variation in disease severity was observed, with no clear correlation between mutations and phenotype, suggesting that the degree of severity may be affected by other factors.

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