4.4 Article

Eosinophil infiltration in three patients with generalized atrophic benign epidermolysis bullosa from a Japanese family: molecular genetic and immunohistochemical studies

Journal

JOURNAL OF HUMAN GENETICS
Volume 50, Issue 9, Pages 483-489

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1007/s10038-005-0282-4

Keywords

generalized atrophic benign epidermolysis bullosa (GABEB); bullous pemphigoid; BP180; COL17A1; eosinophil infiltration; amyloidosis

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Generalized atrophic benign epidermolysis bullosa (GABEB), a subtype of epidermolysis bullosa (EB), is an autosomal recessive skin disease characterized by derm-epidermal separation leading to skin fragility and atrophy and other associated abnormalities. Although a few reports demonstrated that eosinophils are infiltrating beneath bullas in infants with some types of EB, no such condition in adult GABEB patients has been known. Here we report on three adult patients with GABEB from a Japanese family, whose bullous skin lesions showed massive eosinophil infiltration. One of the three patients showed amyloid deposition at the intestine, kidney, and skin. Linkage analysis revealed that GABEB in the family was linked to COL17A1 with a maximum LOD score of 3.08. Mutation analysis identified in the three patients a homozygous insertional mutation, 209-210insCA, in exon 5 of COL17A1. The expression of mutated COL17A1 was confirmed by semiquantitative RT-PCR, but no signals for truncated COL17A1 protein were detected by the immunohistochemical studies using antibodies against BP180. Furthermore, no autoantibody against the mutant protein was detected by western blot analysis. It is thus less likely that autoantibody and/or a local immune reaction in their skin has a primary role in eosinophil infiltration in these patients.

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