| Literature DB >> 26607765 |
Yveline Hamon1,2,3,4, Monika Legowska5, Patricia Fergelot6,7,8, Sandrine Dallet-Choisy1,2, Louise Newell9, Lise Vanderlynden1,2, Ali Kord Valeshabad10, Karina Acrich11, Hadi Kord12, Tsamakis Charalampos9, Fanny Morice-Picard13, Ian Surplice9, Jerome Zoidakis14, Karen David11, Antonia Vlahou14, Shivanna Ragunatha15, Nikoletta Nagy16,17,18, Katalin Farkas16,17,18, Márta Széll16,17,18, Cyril Goizet6,8, Beate Schacher19, Maurizio Battino20,21, Abdullah Al Farraj Aldosari22, Xinwen Wang23, Yang Liu24, Sylvain Marchand-Adam1,2, Adam Lesner5, Elodie Kara25, Sevil Korkmaz-Icöz26, Celia Moss9,27, Peter Eickholz19, Alain Taieb13, Salih Kavukcu28, Dieter E Jenne3,4, Francis Gauthier1,2, Brice Korkmaz1,2.
Abstract
Papillon-Lefèvre syndrome (PLS) (OMIM: 245000) is a rare disease characterized by severe periodontitis and palmoplantar keratoderma. It is caused by mutations in both alleles of the cathepsin C (CatC) gene CTSC that completely abrogate the proteolytic activity of this cysteine proteinase. Most often, a genetic analysis to enable early and rapid diagnosis of PLS is unaffordable or unavailable. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that active CatC is constitutively excreted and can be easily traced in the urine of normal subjects. If this is true, determining its absence in the urine of patients would be an early, simple, reliable, low-cost and easy diagnostic technique. All 75 urine samples from healthy control subjects (aged 3 months to 80 years) contained proteolytically active CatC and its proform, as revealed by kinetic analysis and immunochemical detection. Of the urine samples of 31 patients with a PLS phenotype, 29 contained neither proteolytically active CatC nor the CatC antigen, so that the PLS diagnosis was confirmed. CatC was detected in the urine of the other two patients, and genetic analysis revealed no loss-of-function mutation in CTSC, indicating that they suffer from a PLS-like condition but not from PLS. Screening for the absence of urinary CatC activity soon after birth and early treatment before the onset of PLS manifestations will help to prevent aggressive periodontitis and loss of many teeth, and should considerably improve the quality of life of PLS patients.Entities:
Keywords: Papillon-Lefèvre syndrome; cathepsin C; diagnostic method; protease; urine analysis
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Year: 2016 PMID: 26607765 DOI: 10.1111/febs.13605
Source DB: PubMed Journal: FEBS J ISSN: 1742-464X Impact factor: 5.542