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      Ectodermal dysplasia-skin fragility syndrome due to a new homozygous internal deletion mutation in the PKP1 gene.

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          Abstract

          Ectodermal dysplasia-skin fragility syndrome (ED-SFS) is a rare autosomal recessive genodermatosis resulting from mutations in the PKP1 gene, encoding the desmosomal plaque protein plakophilin-1 (PKP1). Mutations in PKP1 may manifest with skin fragility and erosions, patches of scale crust on the trunk and limbs, peri-oral cracking and inflammation, hypotrichosis, palmoplantar keratoderma with painful fissuring and other somewhat variable ectodermal anomalies. Ten cases of the syndrome have been reported. We report a further case of this desmosomal genodermatosis. A 14-month old child, born to consanguineous parents, presented with a history of neonatal bullae and subsequent development of dystrophic nails, sparse eyelashes and eyebrows, woolly scalp hair, abnormal dental development and a desquamating erythematous rash at sites of trauma. A clinical diagnosis of ED-SFS was supported by skin biopsy findings of suprabasal intraepidermal clefting and a loss of immunoreactivity for PKP1. Sequencing of genomic DNA revealed a homozygous 5 base pair deletion in exon 5 of the PKP1 gene, designated c.897del5 (CAACC). This new mutation creates a frameshift, leading to a downstream premature termination codon, p.Pro299fsX61. This case highlights the clinicopathological consequences of inherited mutations in the PKP1 gene and illustrates the key role of desmosomes in skin biology.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          Australas. J. Dermatol.
          The Australasian journal of dermatology
          Wiley
          1440-0960
          0004-8380
          Feb 2012
          : 53
          : 1
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. aaroneboyce@yahoo.com.au
          Article
          10.1111/j.1440-0960.2011.00846.x
          22309335
          dea9f14a-6ad3-4473-9034-3fe107a13233
          History

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