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Insight intoIKBKG/NEMOLocus: Report of New Mutations and Complex Genomic Rearrangements Leading to Incontinentia Pigmenti Disease

Authors :
Alessandra Pescatore
Mariateresa Paciolla
Christine Bodemer
Asma Smahi
Angela E. Scheuerle
Jean-Paul Bonnefont
Maria Giuseppina Miano
Elio Esposito
Matilde Immacolata Conte
Matilde Valeria Ursini
Maeve A. McAleer
Ghislaine Royer
Smail Hadj-Rabia
Claudio Pignata
Francesca Fusco
Alan D. Irvine
Giuliana Giardino
Julie Steffann
Maria Brigida Lioi
Arnold Munnich
Conte, Mi
Pescatore, A
Paciolla, M
Esposito, E
Miano, Mg
Lioi, Mb
Mcaleer, Ma
Giardino, Giuliana
Pignata, Claudio
Irvine, Ad
Scheuerle, Ae
Royer, G
Hadj Rabia, S
Bodemer, C
Bonnefont, Jp
Munnich, A
Smahi, A
Steffann, J
Fusco, F
Ursini, Mv
Source :
Human Mutation. 35:165-177
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
Hindawi Limited, 2013.

Abstract

Incontinentia pigmenti (IP) is an X-linked-dominant Mendelian disorder caused by mutation in the IKBKG/NEMO gene, encoding for NEMO/IKKgamma, a regulatory protein of nuclear factor kappaB (NF-kB) signaling. In more than 80% of cases, IP is due to recurrent or nonrecurrent deletions causing loss-of-function (LoF) of NEMO/IKKgamma. We review how the local architecture of the IKBKG/NEMO locus with segmental duplication and a high frequency of repetitive elements favor de novo aberrant recombination through different mechanisms producing genomic microdeletion. We report here a new microindel (c.436_471delinsT, p.Val146X) arising through a DNA-replication-repair fork-stalling-and-template-switching and microhomology-mediated-end-joining mechanism in a sporadic IP case. The LoF mutations of IKBKG/NEMO leading to IP include small insertions/deletions (indel) causing frameshift and premature stop codons, which account for 10% of cases. We here present 21 point mutations previously unreported, which further extend the spectrum of pathologic variants: 14/21 predict LoF because of premature stop codon (6/14) or frameshift (8/14), whereas 7/21 predict a partial loss of NEMO/IKKgamma activity (two splicing and five missense). We review how the analysis of IP-associated IKBKG/NEMO hypomorphic mutants has contributed to the understanding of the pathophysiological mechanism of IP disease and has provided important information on affected NF-kB signaling. We built a locus-specific database listing all IKBKG/NEMO variants, accessible at http://IKBKG.lovd.nl.

Details

ISSN :
10597794
Volume :
35
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Human Mutation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....10024dea68d404424675ee0016983018
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/humu.22483