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Rare Filaggrin Variants Are Associated with Pustular Skin Diseases in Asians.

Luca Lo PiccoloWasinee WongkummoolPhatcharida JantareeTeerada KlaisuwanSuteeraporn ChaowattanapanitChareon ChoonhakarnWarayuwadee AmornpinyoRomanee ChaiwarithSalin KiratikanonRujira RujiwetpongstornNapatra TovanabutraSiri ChiewchanvitChumpol NgamphiwWorrachet IntachaiPiranit Nik KantaputraMati Chuamanochan
Published in: International journal of molecular sciences (2024)
Reactive pustular eruptions (RPEs) can manifest in a variety of conditions, including pustular psoriasis (PP) and adult-onset immunodeficiency syndrome due to anti-interferon-γ autoantibody (AOID). These RPEs can be attributed to different causes, one of which is genetic factors. However, the genetic basis for pustular skin diseases remains poorly understood. In our study, we conducted whole-exome sequencing on a cohort of 17 AOID patients with pustular reactions (AOID-PR) and 24 PP patients. We found that 76% and 58% of the AOID-PR and PP patients, respectively, carried rare genetic variations within the filaggrin (FLG) gene family. A total of 12 out of 21 SNPs on FLG had previously received clinical classifications, with only p.Ser2706Ter classified as pathogenic. In contrast, none of the FLG3 SNPs identified in this study had prior clinical classifications. Overall, these variations had not been previously documented in cases of pustular disorders, and two of them were entirely novel discoveries. Immunohistochemical analysis of skin biopsies revealed that FLG variants like p.Ser860Trp, p.Gly3903Ter, p.Gly2440Glu, and p.Glu2133Asp caused reductions in FLG levels similar to the pathogenic FLG p.Ser2706Ter. These results highlight rare FLG variants as potential novel genetic risk factors contributing to pustule formation in both AOID and PP.
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