Incontinentia pigmenti in a surviving male is accompanied by hypohidrotic ectodermal dysplasia and recurrent infection

S Mansour, H Woffendin, S Mitton… - American journal of …, 2001 - Wiley Online Library
S Mansour, H Woffendin, S Mitton, I Jeffery, T Jakins, S Kenwrick, VA Murday
American journal of medical genetics, 2001Wiley Online Library
Familial Incontinentia pigmenti (IP) is a rare X‐linked dominant condition. The affected cases
have characteristic skin lesions, hair, eye, teeth and nail abnormalities and may also have
neurological problems. The diagnosis has traditionally been made on clinical grounds.
Segregation analysis has suggested that it is lethal in males. Only one liveborn male has
been reported who died at one day of age. Female cases of IP survive because of the
moderating effects of Lyonization. This child was the affected son of a female with IP. He had …
Abstract
Familial Incontinentia pigmenti (IP) is a rare X‐linked dominant condition. The affected cases have characteristic skin lesions, hair, eye, teeth and nail abnormalities and may also have neurological problems. The diagnosis has traditionally been made on clinical grounds. Segregation analysis has suggested that it is lethal in males. Only one liveborn male has been reported who died at one day of age. Female cases of IP survive because of the moderating effects of Lyonization. This child was the affected son of a female with IP. He had a novel phenotype consistent with hypohidrotic ectodermal dysplasia with immune deficiency (HED‐ID) but with additional features: he had major problems with hematological disturbances, failure to thrive due to malabsorption, recurrent infections, generalized osteosclerosis and lymphedema of his lower limbs. He also demonstrated some typical features of IP with a generalized reticular skin hyperpigmentation, sparse hair and delayed eruption of teeth.
The gene for NEMO (NF‐κB Essential Modulator) has recently been shown to be mutated in cases of IP. Furthermore, most (80%) of patients possess a recurrent genomic rearrangement that deletes part of the gene resulting in an inactive NEMO protein. In the male case described here, a NEMO stop codon mutation has been identified that has arisen de novo in his affected mother. This mutation is likely to have a less severe effect on NEMO activity and may explain why this child survived for two years and 7 months. © 2001 Wiley‐Liss. Inc.
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