Loss of plectin causes epidermolysis bullosa with muscular dystrophy: cDNA cloning and genomic organization.

  1. W H McLean,
  2. L Pulkkinen,
  3. F J Smith,
  4. E L Rugg,
  5. E B Lane,
  6. F Bullrich,
  7. R E Burgeson,
  8. S Amano,
  9. D L Hudson,
  10. K Owaribe,
  11. J A McGrath,
  12. J R McMillan,
  13. R A Eady,
  14. I M Leigh,
  15. A M Christiano, and
  16. J Uitto
  1. Department of Anatomy and Physiology, Medical Sciences Institute, University of Dundee, UK.

Abstract

Plectin is a widely expressed high molecular weight protein that is involved in cytoskeleton-membrane attachment in epithelial cells, muscle, and other tissues. The human autosomal recessive disorder epidermolysis bullosa with muscular dystrophy (MD-EBS) shows epidermal blister formation at the level of the hemidesmosome and is associated with a myopathy of unknown etiology. Here, plectin was found to be absent in skin and cultured keratinocytes from an MD-EBS patient by immunofluorescence and immunoprecipitation, suggesting that plectin is a candidate gene/protein system for MD-EBS mutation. The 14800-bp human plectin cDNA was cloned and sequenced. The predicted 518-kD polypeptide has homology to the actin-binding domain of the dystrophin family at the amino terminus, a central rod domain, and homology to the intermediate filament-associated protein desmoplakin at the carboxyl terminus. The corresponding human gene (PLEC1), consisting of 33 exons spanning >26 kb of genomic DNA was cloned, sequenced, and mapped to chromosomal band 8q24. Homozygosity by descent was observed in the consanguineous MD-EBS family with intragenic plectin polymorphisms. Direct sequencing of PCR-amplified plectin cDNA from the patient's keratinocytes revealed a homozygous 8-bp deletion in exon 32 causing a frameshift and a premature termination codon 42 bp downstream. The clinically unaffected parents of the proband were found to be heterozygous carriers of the mutation. These results establish the molecular basis of MD-EBS in this family and clearly demonstrate the important structural role for plectin in cytoskeleton-membrane adherence in both skin and muscle.

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