C-terminally truncated kindlin-1 leads to abnormal adhesion and migration of keratinocytes.

Journal: The British Journal Of Dermatology
Published:
Abstract

Background: The Kindler syndrome (KS) protein kindlin-1 is a member of a protein complex that links cortical actin to integrins on the surface of basal keratinocytes. Loss of kindlin-1 leads to abnormalities of cell adhesion and motility, and to skin blistering and progressive poikiloderma as clinical symptoms.

Objective: Here we investigated a severely affected patient, disclosed the mutation that caused the disease and delineated its biological consequences.

Methods: Mutation screening of the kindlin-1 gene, KIND1 (now called FERMT1), was performed with polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification of all exons and sequencing. Mutated kindlin-1 was characterized by reverse transcriptase (RT)-PCR and immunoblotting, and genotype-phenotype correlations were analysed using immunohistochemical staining of skin biopsies and keratinocytes from the patient's skin. Cell adhesion and motility were assessed with functional tests.

Results: We disclosed a splice site mutation in the first position of intron 13 of the FERMT1 gene, which caused skipping of exon 13. The short transcript partially escaped nonsense-mediated mRNA decay and was translated into a truncated protein.

Conclusions: A C-terminally truncated kindlin-1 in keratinocytes could not function correctly even if it were expressed.

Authors
C Has, R Ludwig, C Herz, J Kern, S Ussar, F Ochsendorf, R Kaufmann, H Schumann, J Kohlhase, L Bruckner Tuderman