| Literature DB >> 33303784 |
Hassan Vahidnezhad1,2,3, Leila Youssefian1,2,4,5, Masoomeh Faghankhani1,2, Nikoo Mozafari6, Amir Hossein Saeidian1,2,4, Fatemeh Niaziorimi1,2, Fahimeh Abdollahimajd6, Soheila Sotoudeh7, Fateme Rajabi6, Liaosadat Mirsafaei8, Zahra Alizadeh Sani9, Lu Liu10, Alyson Guy10, Sirous Zeinali3,11, Ariana Kariminejad12, Reginald T Ho13, John A McGrath14, Jouni Uitto15,16.
Abstract
Arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy (ARVC), with skin manifestations, has been associated with mutations in JUP encoding plakoglobin. Genotype-phenotype correlations regarding the penetrance of cardiac involvement, and age of onset have not been well established. We examined a cohort of 362 families with skin fragility to screen for genetic mutations with next-generation sequencing-based methods. In two unrelated families, a previously unreported biallelic mutation, JUP: c.201delC; p.Ser68Alafs*92, was disclosed. The consequences of this mutation were determined by expression profiling both at tissue and ultrastructural levels, and the patients were evaluated by cardiac and cutaneous work-up. Whole-transcriptome sequencing by RNA-Seq revealed JUP as the most down-regulated gene among 21 skin fragility-associated genes. Immunofluorescence showed the lack of plakoglobin in the epidermis. Two probands, 2.5 and 22-year-old, with the same homozygous mutation, allowed us to study the cross-sectional progression of cardiac involvements in relation to age. The older patient had anterior T wave inversions, prolonged terminal activation duration (TAD), and RV enlargement by echocardiogram, and together with JUP mutation met definite ARVC diagnosis. The younger patient had no evidence of cardiac disease, but met possible ARVC diagnosis with one major criterion (the JUP mutation). In conclusion, we identified the same biallelic homozygous JUP mutation in two unrelated families with skin fragility, but cardiac findings highlighted age-dependent penetrance of ARVC. Thus, young, phenotypically normal patients with biallelic JUP mutations should be monitored for development of ARVC.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 33303784 PMCID: PMC7729882 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-78344-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Summary of previously reported patients with biallelic homozygous JUP mutations presented with concomitant skin and cardiac manifestations.
| Family No | No. of patients | Country of Origin | Age | Mutation | Exon/Intron | Integumentary manifestation | Cardiac involvement | Age at cardiac presentation |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | 2 | Kuwait[ | 6 m, 12 m | p.468G > A | Ex 3# | Skin fragility, PPK, sparse woolly hair, nail dystrophy | – | N/A |
| 2 | 3§ | Argentina[ | 2–11 y | p.Ser24* | Ex 2 | Skin fragility, PPK, sparse woolly hair, nail dystrophy | – | N/A |
| 3 | 1§ | Argentina[ | 17 y | p.Ser24* | Ex 2 | Skin fragility, PPK, sparse woolly hair, nail dystrophy | DCM (left) | 19 y |
| 4 | 1 | N/R[ | 18 d¶ | p.Gln184* | Ex 4 | Skin fragility, alopecia, nail dystrophy | Perivascular fibrosis myocyte dropout** | N/A |
| 5 | 1 | N/R[ | 12 d¶ | p.Gln539* | Ex 9 | Skin fragility, alopecia, onycholysis | Unkown | N/A |
| 6 | 2 | Turkey[ | 34–46 y | p.Arg265His | Ex 5 | NEPPK, alopecia | ARVC | 20 y, N/R |
| 7 | 7 | France-Canada[ | 12–77 y | p.Glu301Gly | Ex 5 | NEPPK, woolly hair | ARVC | 18 y–48 y |
| 8 | 19+ | Greece[ | N/R | p.Trp680Glyfs*11 | Ex 12 | NEPPK, woolly hair | ARVC | N/R |
| 9 | 28+ | Greece[ | 1–61 y | p.Trp680Glyfs*11 | Ex 12 | NEPPK, woolly hair | ARVC | 12–68 y |
| 10 | 2 | Iran(this study) | 2.5 y, 22 y | p.Ser68Alafs*92 | Ex 2 | Skin fragility, PPK, alopecia, nail dystrophy | Uncertain, ARVC | N/A |
§, + : The patients are shared; ¶: deceased; d: day; m: month; y: year; N/R: Not reported; N/A: Not available; NEPPK: Non-epidermolytic palmoplantar keratoderma; ARVC: Arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy; DCM: Dilated cardiomyopathy.
#Synonymous mutation at the border of exon 3 and IVS 3 resulted in aberrant splicing.
**The results of post-mortem autopsy.
Figure 1Clinical findings in patients with JUP-associated spectrum of skin fragility. Patient 1 (upper panel): A 2.5-year-old male manifested with trauma-induced blisters and erosions of the skin; perioral, axillary, plantar, and antecubital fissures; plantar hyperkeratosis; and absence of hair on his scalp. Patient 2 (lower panel): A 22-year-old female showed trauma-induced blisters and erosions; hyperkeratosis of palms, soles, knees and elbows; joint contractures of fingers; and absence of hair on her scalp.
Figure 3Identification of biallelic JUP mutations. (a) Pedigrees of two families with consanguinity. The proband in each family is indicated by an arrowhead. (b) Identification of the mutation in JUP by analysis of annotated variants from RNA-Seq data in Patient 2 using bioinformatics filtering steps indicated. (c) Homozygosity mapping based on RNA-Seq data localized the JUP gene within a homozygosity block of 10.7 Mb on chromosome 17. (d) Sanger sequencing confirmed the presence of the previously unreported homozygous mutation, JUP: NM_002230: exon 2, c.201_201delC, p.Ser68Alafs*92, in both probands. (e) Heatmap visualization of transcriptome analysis revealed markedly reduced level of JUP expression in comparison to the pool of six healthy controls when compared to other genes associated with EB phenotypes and randomly selected housekeeping genes. (f) Sashimi plot of the transcriptome profile of the mutant JUP mRNA revealed normal splicing, indicating lack of exon skipping and/or significant intron retention. (g) Protein visualization of full-length JUP consisting of 745 amino acids. The mutation identified in this study (red) is predicted to result in a frameshift and early truncation of the protein. Two previously reported JUP mutations in patients with similar phenotype are shown (black). The figure was rendered in PyMol (v.2, Schrodinger, New York, NY). For details of WES, homozygosity mapping, RNA sequencing and protein modeling, see PyMol, http://Rymol.org[18,24,28,43].
Figure 2EKG, CMRI with Gadolinium findings in Patient 2. (a) EKG shows inverted T waves in leads V1, V2 and V3 (asterisks, major criterion) and a prolonged V3 terminal activation duration (TAD) = 80 ms (minor criterion). Epsilon waves are absent. (There is also a right arm/left arm limb lead reversal). CMRI shows normal myocardial thickness and wall motion along with normal left and right ventricular size, volume, and function (b and c). T2-weighted images (short-TI inversion recovery sequence) in the four-chamber (b) and short-axis (c) views of the ventricles show neither myocardial edema nor inflammation (d and e). Four-chamber (d) and short-axis views (e) of the ventricles in late Gadolinium enhancement sequences show no myocardial enhancement or evidence of myocardial replacement with fibrosis.
Figure 4Immunofluorescence and transmission electron microscopy analysis of skin biopsy from Patient 2. IF staining for junction plakoglobin (encoded by JUP) shows complete absence of the protein in the epidermis of the patient (left lower panel) compared to pan-epidermal keratinocyte cell membrane labeling in an unrelated individual’s healthy skin (left upper panel). Ultrastructurally (right panel), desmosomes appear somewhat small with pinching off within the intercellular desmosomal plaques (arrows) and widening of the intercellular spaces between adjacent keratinocytes (asterisks). For technical details see reference[44].