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Pseudoxanthoma elasticum: clinical phenotypes, molecular genetics and putative pathomechanisms

期刊

EXPERIMENTAL DERMATOLOGY
卷 18, 期 1, 页码 1-11

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1600-0625.2008.00795.x

关键词

ABC transporters; heritable skin diseases; pathologic connective tissue mineralisation

资金

  1. United States Department of Health and Human Services, NIH/NIAMS [R01AR28450, R01AR52627, R01AR55225]
  2. PXE International
  3. OTKA Research Grants (Hungary)
  4. NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF ARTHRITIS AND MUSCULOSKELETAL AND SKIN DISEASES [R01AR055225, R01AR052627, R01AR028450, K08AR057099] Funding Source: NIH RePORTER

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Pseudoxanthoma elasticum (PXE), a prototype of heritable multisystem disorders, is characterised by pathologic mineralisation of connective tissues, with primary clinical manifestations in the skin, eyes and the cardiovascular system. The causative gene was initially identified as ABCC6 which encodes an ABC transporter protein (ABCC6) expressed primarily in the liver and the kidneys. The critical role of ABCC6 in ectopic mineralisation has been confirmed by the development of Abcc6(-/-) knock-out mice which recapitulate the features of connective tissue mineralisation characteristic of PXE. Over 300 distinct loss-of-function mutations representative of over 1000 mutant alleles in ABCC6 have been identified by streamlined mutation detection strategies in this autosomal recessive disease. More recently, missense mutations in the GGCX gene, either in compound heterozygous state or digenic with a recurrent ABCC6 nonsense mutation (p.R1141X), have been identified in patients with PXE-like cutaneous findings and vitamin K-dependent coagulation factor deficiency. GGCX encodes a carboxylase which catalyses gamma-glutamyl carboxylation of coagulation factors as well as of matrix gla protein (MGP) which in fully carboxylated form serves as a systemic inhibitor of pathologic mineralisation. Collectively, these observations suggest the hypothesis that a consequence of loss-of-function mutations in the ABCC6 gene is the reduced vitamin K-dependent gamma-glutamyl carboxylation of MGP, with subsequent connective tissue mineralisation. Further progress in understanding the detailed pathomechanisms of PXE should provide novel strategies to counteract, and perhaps cure, this complex heritable disorder at the genome-environment interface.

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