| Literature DB >> 28457472 |
Thandiswa Ngcungcu1, Martin Oti2, Jan C Sitek3, Bjørn I Haukanes4, Bolan Linghu5, Robert Bruccoleri6, Tomasz Stokowy7, Edward J Oakeley8, Fan Yang9, Jiang Zhu9, Marc Sultan8, Joost Schalkwijk10, Ivonne M J J van Vlijmen-Willems10, Charlotte von der Lippe11, Han G Brunner12, Kari M Ersland13, Wayne Grayson14, Stine Buechmann-Moller8, Olav Sundnes15, Nanguneri Nirmala16, Thomas M Morgan9, Hans van Bokhoven17, Vidar M Steen13, Peter R Hull18, Joseph Szustakowski19, Frank Staedtler8, Huiqing Zhou20, Torunn Fiskerstrand21, Michele Ramsay22.
Abstract
Keratolytic winter erythema (KWE) is a rare autosomal-dominant skin disorder characterized by recurrent episodes of palmoplantar erythema and epidermal peeling. KWE was previously mapped to 8p23.1-p22 (KWE critical region) in South African families. Using targeted resequencing of the KWE critical region in five South African families and SNP array and whole-genome sequencing in two Norwegian families, we identified two overlapping tandem duplications of 7.67 kb (South Africans) and 15.93 kb (Norwegians). The duplications segregated with the disease and were located upstream of CTSB, a gene encoding cathepsin B, a cysteine protease involved in keratinocyte homeostasis. Included in the 2.62 kb overlapping region of these duplications is an enhancer element that is active in epidermal keratinocytes. The activity of this enhancer correlated with CTSB expression in normal differentiating keratinocytes and other cell lines, but not with FDFT1 or NEIL2 expression. Gene expression (qPCR) analysis and immunohistochemistry of the palmar epidermis demonstrated significantly increased expression of CTSB, as well as stronger staining of cathepsin B in the stratum granulosum of affected individuals than in that of control individuals. Analysis of higher-order chromatin structure data and RNA polymerase II ChIA-PET data from MCF-7 cells did not suggest remote effects of the enhancer. In conclusion, KWE in South African and Norwegian families is caused by tandem duplications in a non-coding genomic region containing an active enhancer element for CTSB, resulting in upregulation of this gene in affected individuals.Entities:
Keywords: CTSB; KWE; Norway; South Africa; autosomal-dominant trait; enhancer duplication; gene regulation; keratoderma; keratolytic winter erythema; topological domains
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28457472 PMCID: PMC5420352 DOI: 10.1016/j.ajhg.2017.03.012
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Hum Genet ISSN: 0002-9297 Impact factor: 11.025