Lamin A and ZMPSTE24 (FACE-1) defects cause nuclear disorganization and identify restrictive dermopathy as a lethal neonatal laminopathy

Claire Navarro(Génétique Médicale & Génomique Fonctionelle), Annachiara De Sandre‐Giovannoli(Hôpital de la Timone), Rafaëlle Bernard(Génétique Médicale & Génomique Fonctionelle), Irène Boccaccio(Génétique Médicale & Génomique Fonctionelle), Amandine Boyer(Hôpital de la Timone), David Geneviève(Inserm), S. Hadj‐Rabia(Assistance Publique – Hôpitaux de Paris), Caroline Gaudy‐Marqueste(Hôpital de la Timone), Henk Sillevis Smitt(Academic Medical Center), P. Vabres(Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Poitiers), Laurence Bonhomme‐Faivre(Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Dijon Bourgogne), Alain Verloès(Hôpital Robert-Debré), Ton van Essen(Institute of Pathology and Genetics), Elisabeth Flori(Hôpital d'Hautepierre), Raoul C. M. Hennekam(Academic Medical Center), Frits A. Beemer(University Medical Center Utrecht), Nicole Laurent(Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Dijon Bourgogne), Martine Le Merrer(Inserm), Pierre Cau(Hôpital de la Timone), Nicolas Lévy(Génétique Médicale & Génomique Fonctionelle)
Human Molecular Genetics
August 18, 2004
Cited by 366Open Access
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Abstract

Restrictive dermopathy (RD), also called tight skin contracture syndrome (OMIM 275210), is a rare disorder mainly characterized by intrauterine growth retardation, tight and rigid skin with erosions, prominent superficial vasculature and epidermal hyperkeratosis, facial features (small mouth, small pinched nose and micrognathia), sparse/absent eyelashes and eyebrows, mineralization defects of the skull, thin dysplastic clavicles, pulmonary hypoplasia, multiple joint contractures and an early neonatal lethal course. Liveborn children usually die within the first week of life. The overall prevalence of consanguineous cases suggested an autosomal recessive inheritance. We explored nine fetuses/newborns children with RD. Two were found to have an heterozygous splicing mutation in the LMNA gene, leading to the complete or partial loss of exon 11 in mRNAs encoding Lamin A and resulting in a truncated Prelamin A protein. Lamins are major constituents of the nuclear lamina, a filamentous meshwork underlying the inner nuclear envelope. In the other seven patients, a unique heterozygous insertion leading to the creation of a premature termination codon was identified in the gene ZMPSTE24, also known as FACE-1 in human. This gene encodes a metalloproteinase specifically involved in the post-translational processing of Lamin A precursor. In all patients carrying a ZMPSTE24 mutation, loss of expression of Lamin A as well as abnormal patterns of nuclear sizes and shapes and mislocalization of Lamin-associated proteins was evidenced. Our results indicate that a common pathogenetic pathway, involving defects of the nuclear lamina and matrix, is involved in all RD cases. RD is thus one of the most deleterious laminopathies identified so far in humans caused by (primary or secondary) A-type Lamin defects and nuclear structural and functional alterations.


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