1. Academic Validation
  2. A mutation in SNAP29, coding for a SNARE protein involved in intracellular trafficking, causes a novel neurocutaneous syndrome characterized by cerebral dysgenesis, neuropathy, ichthyosis, and palmoplantar keratoderma

A mutation in SNAP29, coding for a SNARE protein involved in intracellular trafficking, causes a novel neurocutaneous syndrome characterized by cerebral dysgenesis, neuropathy, ichthyosis, and palmoplantar keratoderma

  • Am J Hum Genet. 2005 Aug;77(2):242-51. doi: 10.1086/432556.
Eli Sprecher 1 Akemi Ishida-Yamamoto Mordechai Mizrahi-Koren Debora Rapaport Dorit Goldsher Margarita Indelman Orit Topaz Ilana Chefetz Hanni Keren Timothy J O'brien Dani Bercovich Stavit Shalev Dan Geiger Reuven Bergman Mia Horowitz Hanna Mandel
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Dermatology and Laboratory of Molecular Dermatology, Rambam Medical Center, Haifa, Israel. e_sprecher@rambam.health.gov.il
Abstract

Neurocutaneous syndromes represent a vast, largely heterogeneous group of disorders characterized by neurological and dermatological manifestations, reflecting the common embryonic origin of epidermal and neural tissues. In the present report, we describe a novel neurocutaneous syndrome characterized by cerebral dysgenesis, neuropathy, ichthyosis, and keratoderma (CEDNIK syndrome). Using homozygosity mapping in two large families, we localized the disease gene to 22q11.2 and identified, in all patients, a 1-bp deletion in SNAP29, which codes for a SNARE protein involved in vesicle fusion. SNAP29 expression was decreased in the skin of the patients, resulting in abnormal maturation of lamellar granules and, as a consequence, in mislocation of epidermal lipids and proteases. These data underscore the importance of vesicle trafficking regulatory mechanisms for proper neuroectodermal differentiation.

Figures