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Genodermatoses

Genodermatoses
  • Neurocutaneous syndromes
  • Tumor syndromes
  • Photosensitivity and Premature Aging Syndromes
 
What to know
  • Overview
  • Inheritance pattern
  • Mutation - what does it do and why does it lead to the clinical findings?
  • Clinical presentation including neonatal
    • Key clinical/laboratory features
  • Associations
  • Buzzwords
  • Treatment, particularly if it is unique to the molecular mechanism
 
Genetics for the dermatologist
  • Chromosomal inheritance
    • Ploidy abnormalities: mosaic diploid/triploid mixoploidy
    • Whole chromosome abnormality: trisomy, monosomy
    • Structural chromosomal abnormalities: translocation, inversion, duplications, deletions, ring
    • Submicroscopical copy number abnormalities: contiguous genes syndrome
  • Mendelian/monogenic diseases = defects in one gene
  • Polygenic diseases = defects in more than one gene
  • Complex/multifactorial diseases result from the interaction of environmental & genetic factors
  • Allelic heterogeneity refers to different clinical entities due to different mutations in the same gene (ex. DSP)
    • For example, Desmoplakin (DSP) mutations cause
      • Striate palmoplantar keratoderma
      • Dilated cardiomyopathy with wooly hair syndrome
      • Severe dermatitis, multiple allergies and metabolic wasting (SAM) syndrome
      • Acantholytic EBS
      • Arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy
  • Locus (genetic) heterogeneity refers to mutations in different genes that result in the same phenotype
    • Some diseases, such as EB simplex, that display both allelic and locus heterogeneity
  • Pleiotropy - a single gene can have varied and multiple effects on different tissues and organs
 
Patterns of Inheritance
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  • Autossomal dominant → often related to structural proteins (eg. neurofibromin in neurofibromatosis 1, hamartin in tuberous sclerosis)
  • Autossomal recessive usually involve enzume defect (xeroderma pigmentosum: DNA repair enzymes; oculocutaneous albinism: tyrosinase)
 
Exceptions to Basic Mendelian Inheritance Patterns
  • Variable expression
    • Different degrees of manifestation of a genotype, either between or within families
    • Examples: broad ranges of severity in Darier disease and neurofibromatosis type 1
  • Incomplete/reduced penetrance
    • Not all individuals show a phonotype
    • AD trait may appear to skip a generation
    • Examples: hereditary leiomyomatosis and renal cell cancer syndrome
  • Age-dependent penetrance
    • Late onset diseases
    • Examples: late onset in Darier and Hailey Hailey disease
  • X-inactivation (lyonization) - mosaicismo funcional
    • Phenotype depends on the proportion of cells expressing the mutant allele
    • Skewed/non-random-X-inactivation = selection agains cells with mutant allele typically a mosaic distribution
    • Examples: incontinentia pigmenti
  • Genomic mosaicism: somatic and gonadal
    • Postzygotic mutation results in a genetically heterogenous organism
    • Timing of the mutation & the cell types affected determine the extent, distribution and type of clinical findings
    • A postzygotic mutation is not transmitted to the offspring except if affecting the gonads which may transmit generalized disease to offspring
    • Examples: PIK3CA/PROS, NF1, epidermolytic ichthyosis (+/- an epidermolytic epidermal nevus reflecting somatic mosaicism in the parent)
    • Definition of masaic disorder (ERN Skin) - distinguish mosaic disorder from mosaic abnormality
      • Coexistance of 2 genotypes
      • Present at birth (some authors like Happle say mosaic disorder can be developped after birth)
      • Derived from a single zygote
      • Post zygotic variant has led to the whole disease phenotype
      • Excludes
        • Superimposed mosaic manifestions of autosomal dominant disease
        • Revertant mosaicism
  • Loss of heterozygosity
    • AKA type 2 segmental manifestations
    • A constitutional heterozygous loss-of-function mutation in a tumor suppressor, high risk of tumor formation from a somatic (”second hit”) mutation inactivating the second allele of the same gene
    • Examples: Skin tumors in hereditary leiomyomatosis and renal cell cancer and basal cell nevus syndrome
  • Revertant mosaicism
    • A postzygotic mutation leads to partial or complete recovery of the wild-type phenotype in an area of skin
    • Examples: several types of EB, ichthyosis with confetti
  • Didimose | twin spots | mosaicismo clonal duplo
    • Recombinação mitótica pós zigótica entre dois loci diferentes de um embrião inicialmete heterozigótico forma dois clones complementares adjacentes
    • Exemplos
      • Nevo epidérmico + nevo pigmentado
      • Cutis tricolor: hiperpigmented and achromic spots. Fenómenos pigmentares opostos
      • “twin vascular nevi” → justaposição de angioma com nevo anémico
  • Post-zygotic mutation indicating a lethal factor
    • notion image
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Blaschko Lines
  • Traces of the migration of primordial ectoderm cells during embryogenesis
    • Queratinócitos derivam da ectoderme de superfície
    • Melanócitos derivam da crista neural
      • notion image
  • Reflect genetic mosaicism: Invisible in healthy individuals, become visible if a dermatosis results in abnormaly mifgrated primordial clone
  • Isolated VS. Syndromic
    • More extensive = more likely systemic involvement
    • Early mutations can involve CNS, msk, ophtho, cardiac tissues
 
Pigmentar mosaicism
  • Seguir até a idade escolar porque pode estar associado a outras alteracoes da ectoderme (cérebro e olhos)
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Embriologic derivatives
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Neurocutaneous Syndromes
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Disorders of Defective DNA Repair
Tumor Syndromes
Ichthyosis | Ictioses | Disorders of Epidermal differentiation/Cornification
Palmoplantar Keratodermas
Ectodermal Dysplasia
Inherited Epidermolysis Bullosa
Intrinsic disorders of the interkeratinocytes adhesion (Calcium pump disorders)
 
 
 
 
Sistematização de mecanismos genéticos e doenças associadas