Cargando…

Prominent Follicular Keratosis in Multiple Intestinal Atresia with Combined Immune Deficiency Caused by a TTC7A Homozygous Mutation

Multiple intestinal atresia with combined immune deficiency (MIA-CID) is an autosomal recessive syndrome due to mutations in the TTC7A gene implicated in the polarization of intestinal and thymic epithelial cells. MIA-CID is lethal in the first year of life in the majority of patients. Dermatologica...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Diociaiuti, Andrea, Caruso, Roberta, Ricci, Silvia, De Vito, Rita, Strocchio, Luisa, Castiglia, Daniele, Zambruno, Giovanna, El Hachem, May
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9141598/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35627206
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/genes13050821
_version_ 1784715383809245184
author Diociaiuti, Andrea
Caruso, Roberta
Ricci, Silvia
De Vito, Rita
Strocchio, Luisa
Castiglia, Daniele
Zambruno, Giovanna
El Hachem, May
author_facet Diociaiuti, Andrea
Caruso, Roberta
Ricci, Silvia
De Vito, Rita
Strocchio, Luisa
Castiglia, Daniele
Zambruno, Giovanna
El Hachem, May
author_sort Diociaiuti, Andrea
collection PubMed
description Multiple intestinal atresia with combined immune deficiency (MIA-CID) is an autosomal recessive syndrome due to mutations in the TTC7A gene implicated in the polarization of intestinal and thymic epithelial cells. MIA-CID is lethal in the first year of life in the majority of patients. Dermatological manifestations have been reported in a few cases. We describe a child affected with MIA-CID due to a previously unreported TTC7A homozygous missense mutation. Surgery for bowel occlusion was performed in the first days of life. The patient was totally dependent on parenteral nutrition since birth and presented severe diarrhea and recurrent infections. He underwent hematopoietic stem cell transplantation at 17 months with complete donor engraftment and partial immunity improvement. In the second year of life, he progressively developed diffuse papular follicular keratoses on ichthyosiform skin, nail clubbing, and subungual hyperkeratosis. Histopathology showed hyperkeratosis with follicular plugging and scattered apoptotic keratinocytes, visualized at an ultrastructural examination. Our findings expand the spectrum of dermatological manifestations which can develop in MIA-CID patients. Examination of further patients will allow defining whether keratinocyte apoptosis is also a disease feature.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-9141598
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2022
publisher MDPI
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-91415982022-05-28 Prominent Follicular Keratosis in Multiple Intestinal Atresia with Combined Immune Deficiency Caused by a TTC7A Homozygous Mutation Diociaiuti, Andrea Caruso, Roberta Ricci, Silvia De Vito, Rita Strocchio, Luisa Castiglia, Daniele Zambruno, Giovanna El Hachem, May Genes (Basel) Case Report Multiple intestinal atresia with combined immune deficiency (MIA-CID) is an autosomal recessive syndrome due to mutations in the TTC7A gene implicated in the polarization of intestinal and thymic epithelial cells. MIA-CID is lethal in the first year of life in the majority of patients. Dermatological manifestations have been reported in a few cases. We describe a child affected with MIA-CID due to a previously unreported TTC7A homozygous missense mutation. Surgery for bowel occlusion was performed in the first days of life. The patient was totally dependent on parenteral nutrition since birth and presented severe diarrhea and recurrent infections. He underwent hematopoietic stem cell transplantation at 17 months with complete donor engraftment and partial immunity improvement. In the second year of life, he progressively developed diffuse papular follicular keratoses on ichthyosiform skin, nail clubbing, and subungual hyperkeratosis. Histopathology showed hyperkeratosis with follicular plugging and scattered apoptotic keratinocytes, visualized at an ultrastructural examination. Our findings expand the spectrum of dermatological manifestations which can develop in MIA-CID patients. Examination of further patients will allow defining whether keratinocyte apoptosis is also a disease feature. MDPI 2022-05-04 /pmc/articles/PMC9141598/ /pubmed/35627206 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/genes13050821 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Case Report
Diociaiuti, Andrea
Caruso, Roberta
Ricci, Silvia
De Vito, Rita
Strocchio, Luisa
Castiglia, Daniele
Zambruno, Giovanna
El Hachem, May
Prominent Follicular Keratosis in Multiple Intestinal Atresia with Combined Immune Deficiency Caused by a TTC7A Homozygous Mutation
title Prominent Follicular Keratosis in Multiple Intestinal Atresia with Combined Immune Deficiency Caused by a TTC7A Homozygous Mutation
title_full Prominent Follicular Keratosis in Multiple Intestinal Atresia with Combined Immune Deficiency Caused by a TTC7A Homozygous Mutation
title_fullStr Prominent Follicular Keratosis in Multiple Intestinal Atresia with Combined Immune Deficiency Caused by a TTC7A Homozygous Mutation
title_full_unstemmed Prominent Follicular Keratosis in Multiple Intestinal Atresia with Combined Immune Deficiency Caused by a TTC7A Homozygous Mutation
title_short Prominent Follicular Keratosis in Multiple Intestinal Atresia with Combined Immune Deficiency Caused by a TTC7A Homozygous Mutation
title_sort prominent follicular keratosis in multiple intestinal atresia with combined immune deficiency caused by a ttc7a homozygous mutation
topic Case Report
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9141598/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35627206
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/genes13050821
work_keys_str_mv AT diociaiutiandrea prominentfollicularkeratosisinmultipleintestinalatresiawithcombinedimmunedeficiencycausedbyattc7ahomozygousmutation
AT carusoroberta prominentfollicularkeratosisinmultipleintestinalatresiawithcombinedimmunedeficiencycausedbyattc7ahomozygousmutation
AT riccisilvia prominentfollicularkeratosisinmultipleintestinalatresiawithcombinedimmunedeficiencycausedbyattc7ahomozygousmutation
AT devitorita prominentfollicularkeratosisinmultipleintestinalatresiawithcombinedimmunedeficiencycausedbyattc7ahomozygousmutation
AT strocchioluisa prominentfollicularkeratosisinmultipleintestinalatresiawithcombinedimmunedeficiencycausedbyattc7ahomozygousmutation
AT castigliadaniele prominentfollicularkeratosisinmultipleintestinalatresiawithcombinedimmunedeficiencycausedbyattc7ahomozygousmutation
AT zambrunogiovanna prominentfollicularkeratosisinmultipleintestinalatresiawithcombinedimmunedeficiencycausedbyattc7ahomozygousmutation
AT elhachemmay prominentfollicularkeratosisinmultipleintestinalatresiawithcombinedimmunedeficiencycausedbyattc7ahomozygousmutation