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Recurrent mutations in kindlin-1, a novel keratinocyte focal contact protein, in the autosomal recessive skin fragility and photosensitivity disorder, Kindler syndrome.
[kindler syndrome]
Kindler
syndrome
(
OMIM
173650
)
is
a
rare
autosomal
recessive
disorder
characterized
by
trauma-induced
blister
formation
(
especially
in
childhood
)
and
photosensitivity
.
Other
features
include
mucocutaneous
scarring
and
progressive
poikiloderma
.
There
is
also
an
increased
risk
of
skin
and
mucous
membrane
malignancy
.
The
disorder
was
recently
mapped
to
20
p
12
.
3
and
pathogenic
mutations
were
identified
in
a
new
gene
,
KIND
1
.
This
gene
encodes
a
677
amino
acid
protein
,
kindlin-
1
,
a
component
of
focal
contacts
in
keratinocytes
.
In
this
study
,
we
identified
four
new
recurrent
mutations
in
KIND
1
in
16
individuals
with
Kindler
syndrome
from
13
families
of
Pakistani
(
676
insC
)
,
UK
Caucasian
(
E
304
X
)
,
Omani
(
W
616
X
)
,
or
Italian
(
958
-
1
G
>
A
)
origins
.
Haplotype
analysis
demonstrated
common
ancestral
mutant
alleles
for
each
mutation
,
apart
from
one
of
the
six
Pakistani
families
in
which
the
mutation
676
insC
(
which
occurs
in
a
repeat
of
seven
cytosines
)
was
present
on
a
different
genetic
background
.
All
mutations
were
homozygous
,
apart
from
the
three
UK
Caucasian
cases
that
were
all
compound
heterozygotes
(
second
allele
mutations
:
L
302
X
,
1161
delA
,
1909
delA
)
.
All
mutations
were
associated
with
markedly
reduced
or
absent
skin
immunostaining
with
an
antikindlin-
1
antibody
.
These
loss
-of-function
KIND
1
mutations
demonstrate
the
importance
of
kindlin-
1
in
maintaining
epithelial
integrity
,
although
the
mechanism
linking
this
mutant
protein
to
photosensitivity
and
poikiloderma
remains
to
be
determined
.
Delineation
of
these
recurrent
mutations
is
also
relevant
to
optimizing
mutation
detection
strategies
in
Kindler
syndrome
patients
from
particular
ethnic
backgrounds
.
Diseases
Validation
Diseases presenting
"scarring"
symptom
acute rheumatic fever
cutaneous mastocytosis
cystinuria
dystrophic epidermolysis bullosa
epidermolysis bullosa simplex
erythropoietic protoporphyria
focal myositis
junctional epidermolysis bullosa
kindler syndrome
malignant atrophic papulosis
oral submucous fibrosis
papillon-lefèvre syndrome
primary hyperoxaluria type 1
proteus syndrome
This symptom has already been validated