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Epithelial inflammation resulting from an inherited loss-of-function mutation in EGFR

Epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) signaling is fundamentally important for tissue homeostasis through EGFR/ligand interactions that stimulate numerous signal transduction pathways. Aberrant EGFR signaling has been reported in inflammatory and malignant diseases but thus far no primary inherite...

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Autores principales: Campbell, Patrick, Morton, Penny, Takeichi, Takuya, Salam, Amr, Roberts, Nerys, Proudfoot, Laura E., Mellerio, Jemima E., Aminu, Kingi, Wellington, Cheryl, Patil, Sachin N., Akiyama, Masashi, Liu, Lu, McMillan, James R., Aristodemou, Sophia, Ishida-Yamamoto, Akemi, Abdul-Wahab, Alya, Petrof, Gabriela, Fong, Kenneth, Harnchoowong, Sarawin, Stone, Kristina, Harper, John I., McLean, W. H. Irwin, Simpson, Michael A., Parsons, Maddy, McGrath, John A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4090136/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24691054
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/jid.2014.164
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author Campbell, Patrick
Morton, Penny
Takeichi, Takuya
Salam, Amr
Roberts, Nerys
Proudfoot, Laura E.
Mellerio, Jemima E.
Aminu, Kingi
Wellington, Cheryl
Patil, Sachin N.
Akiyama, Masashi
Liu, Lu
McMillan, James R.
Aristodemou, Sophia
Ishida-Yamamoto, Akemi
Abdul-Wahab, Alya
Petrof, Gabriela
Fong, Kenneth
Harnchoowong, Sarawin
Stone, Kristina
Harper, John I.
McLean, W. H. Irwin
Simpson, Michael A.
Parsons, Maddy
McGrath, John A.
author_facet Campbell, Patrick
Morton, Penny
Takeichi, Takuya
Salam, Amr
Roberts, Nerys
Proudfoot, Laura E.
Mellerio, Jemima E.
Aminu, Kingi
Wellington, Cheryl
Patil, Sachin N.
Akiyama, Masashi
Liu, Lu
McMillan, James R.
Aristodemou, Sophia
Ishida-Yamamoto, Akemi
Abdul-Wahab, Alya
Petrof, Gabriela
Fong, Kenneth
Harnchoowong, Sarawin
Stone, Kristina
Harper, John I.
McLean, W. H. Irwin
Simpson, Michael A.
Parsons, Maddy
McGrath, John A.
author_sort Campbell, Patrick
collection PubMed
description Epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) signaling is fundamentally important for tissue homeostasis through EGFR/ligand interactions that stimulate numerous signal transduction pathways. Aberrant EGFR signaling has been reported in inflammatory and malignant diseases but thus far no primary inherited defects in EGFR have been recorded. Using whole-exome sequencing, we identified a homozygous loss-of-function missense mutation in EGFR (c.1283G>A; p.Gly428Asp) in a male infant with life-long inflammation affecting the skin, bowel and lungs. During the first year of life, his skin showed erosions, dry scale, and alopecia. Subsequently, there were numerous papules and pustules – similar to the rash seen in patients receiving EGFR inhibitor drugs. Skin biopsy demonstrated an altered cellular distribution of EGFR in the epidermis with reduced cell membrane labeling, and in vitro analysis of the mutant receptor revealed abrogated EGFR phosphorylation and EGF-stimulated downstream signaling. Microarray analysis on the patient’s skin highlighted disturbed differentiation/premature terminal differentiation of keratinocytes and upregulation of several inflammatory/innate immune response networks. The boy died aged 2.5 years from extensive skin and chest infections as well as electrolyte imbalance. This case highlights the major mechanism of epithelial dysfunction following EGFR signaling ablation and illustrates the broader impact of EGFR inhibition on other tissues.
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spelling pubmed-40901362015-04-01 Epithelial inflammation resulting from an inherited loss-of-function mutation in EGFR Campbell, Patrick Morton, Penny Takeichi, Takuya Salam, Amr Roberts, Nerys Proudfoot, Laura E. Mellerio, Jemima E. Aminu, Kingi Wellington, Cheryl Patil, Sachin N. Akiyama, Masashi Liu, Lu McMillan, James R. Aristodemou, Sophia Ishida-Yamamoto, Akemi Abdul-Wahab, Alya Petrof, Gabriela Fong, Kenneth Harnchoowong, Sarawin Stone, Kristina Harper, John I. McLean, W. H. Irwin Simpson, Michael A. Parsons, Maddy McGrath, John A. J Invest Dermatol Article Epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) signaling is fundamentally important for tissue homeostasis through EGFR/ligand interactions that stimulate numerous signal transduction pathways. Aberrant EGFR signaling has been reported in inflammatory and malignant diseases but thus far no primary inherited defects in EGFR have been recorded. Using whole-exome sequencing, we identified a homozygous loss-of-function missense mutation in EGFR (c.1283G>A; p.Gly428Asp) in a male infant with life-long inflammation affecting the skin, bowel and lungs. During the first year of life, his skin showed erosions, dry scale, and alopecia. Subsequently, there were numerous papules and pustules – similar to the rash seen in patients receiving EGFR inhibitor drugs. Skin biopsy demonstrated an altered cellular distribution of EGFR in the epidermis with reduced cell membrane labeling, and in vitro analysis of the mutant receptor revealed abrogated EGFR phosphorylation and EGF-stimulated downstream signaling. Microarray analysis on the patient’s skin highlighted disturbed differentiation/premature terminal differentiation of keratinocytes and upregulation of several inflammatory/innate immune response networks. The boy died aged 2.5 years from extensive skin and chest infections as well as electrolyte imbalance. This case highlights the major mechanism of epithelial dysfunction following EGFR signaling ablation and illustrates the broader impact of EGFR inhibition on other tissues. 2014-04-01 2014-10 /pmc/articles/PMC4090136/ /pubmed/24691054 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/jid.2014.164 Text en Users may view, print, copy, and download text and data-mine the content in such documents, for the purposes of academic research, subject always to the full Conditions of use:http://www.nature.com/authors/editorial_policies/license.html#terms
spellingShingle Article
Campbell, Patrick
Morton, Penny
Takeichi, Takuya
Salam, Amr
Roberts, Nerys
Proudfoot, Laura E.
Mellerio, Jemima E.
Aminu, Kingi
Wellington, Cheryl
Patil, Sachin N.
Akiyama, Masashi
Liu, Lu
McMillan, James R.
Aristodemou, Sophia
Ishida-Yamamoto, Akemi
Abdul-Wahab, Alya
Petrof, Gabriela
Fong, Kenneth
Harnchoowong, Sarawin
Stone, Kristina
Harper, John I.
McLean, W. H. Irwin
Simpson, Michael A.
Parsons, Maddy
McGrath, John A.
Epithelial inflammation resulting from an inherited loss-of-function mutation in EGFR
title Epithelial inflammation resulting from an inherited loss-of-function mutation in EGFR
title_full Epithelial inflammation resulting from an inherited loss-of-function mutation in EGFR
title_fullStr Epithelial inflammation resulting from an inherited loss-of-function mutation in EGFR
title_full_unstemmed Epithelial inflammation resulting from an inherited loss-of-function mutation in EGFR
title_short Epithelial inflammation resulting from an inherited loss-of-function mutation in EGFR
title_sort epithelial inflammation resulting from an inherited loss-of-function mutation in egfr
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4090136/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24691054
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/jid.2014.164
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