Novel IL31RA gene mutation and ancestral OSMR mutant allele in familial primary cutaneous amyloidosis
Primary cutaneous amyloidosis (PCA) is an itchy skin disorder associated with amyloid deposits in the superficial dermis. The disease is relatively common in Southeast Asia and South America. Autosomal dominant PCA has been mapped earlier to 5p13.1–q11.2 and two pathogenic missense mutations in the...
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Veröffentlicht in: | European journal of human genetics : EJHG 2010-01, Vol.18 (1), p.26-32 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Primary cutaneous amyloidosis (PCA) is an itchy skin disorder associated with amyloid deposits in the superficial dermis. The disease is relatively common in Southeast Asia and South America. Autosomal dominant PCA has been mapped earlier to 5p13.1–q11.2 and two pathogenic missense mutations in the
OSMR
gene, which encodes the interleukin-6 family cytokine receptor oncostatin M receptor beta (OSMR
β
), were reported. Here, we investigated 29 Taiwanese pedigrees with PCA and found that 10 had heterozygous missense mutations in
OSMR
: p.D647V (one family), p.P694L (six families), and p.K697T (three families). The mutation p.P694L was associated with the same haplotype in five of six families and also detected in two sporadic cases of PCA. Of the other 19 pedigrees that lacked
OSMR
pathology, 8 mapped to the same locus on chromosome 5, which also contains the genes for 3 other interleukin-6 family cytokine receptors, including interleukin-31 receptor A (IL31RA), which can form a heterodimeric receptor with OSMR
β
through interleukin-31 signaling. In one family, we identified a point mutation in the
IL31RA
gene, c.1562C>T that results in a missense mutation, p.S521F, which is also sited within a fibronectin type III-like repeat domain as observed in the
OSMR
mutations. PCA is a genetically heterogeneous disorder but our study shows that it can be caused by mutations in two biologically associated cytokine receptor genes located on chromosome 5. The identification of
OSMR
and
IL31RA
gene pathology provides an explanation of the high prevalence of PCA in Taiwan as well as new insight into disease pathophysiology. |
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ISSN: | 1018-4813 1476-5438 |
DOI: | 10.1038/ejhg.2009.135 |