Acral peeling in Nagashima type palmo-plantar keratosis patients reveals the role of serine protease inhibitor B 7 in keratinocyte adhesion

Eran Cohen-Barak*, Wassim Azzam, Jennifer L. Koetsier, Nada Danial-Farran, Moran Barcan, Maysa Hriesh, Morad Khayat, Natalia Edison, Judith Krausz, Chen Gafni-Amsalem, Akiharu Kubo, Lisa M. Godsel, Michael Ziv, Stavit Allon-Shalev

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

6 Scopus citations

Abstract

Acral peeling skin syndrome (APSS) is a heterogenous group of genodermatoses, manifested by peeling of palmo-plantar skin and occasionally associated with erythema and epidermal thickening. A subset of APSS is caused by mutations in protease inhibitor encoding genes, resulting in unopposed protease activity and desmosomal degradation and/or mis-localization, leading to enhanced epidermal desquamation. We investigated two Arab-Muslim siblings with mild keratoderma and prominent APSS since infancy. Genetic analysis disclosed a homozygous mutation in SERPINB7, c.796C > T, which is the founder mutation in Nagashima type palmo-plantar keratosis (NPPK). Although not previously formally reported, APSS was found in other patients with NPPK. We hypothesized that loss of SERPINB7 function might contribute to the peeling phenotype through impairment of keratinocyte adhesion, similar to other protease inhibitor mutations that cause APSS. Mis-localization of desmosomal components was observed in a patient plantar biopsy compared with a biopsy from an age- and gender-matched healthy control. Silencing of SERPINB7 in normal human epidermal keratinocytes led to increased cell sheet fragmentation upon mechanical stress. Immunostaining showed reduced expression of desmoglein 1 and desmocollin 1. This study shows that in addition to stratum corneum perturbation, loss of SERPINB7 disrupts desmosomal components, which could lead to desquamation, manifested by skin peeling.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)214-222
Number of pages9
JournalExperimental Dermatology
Volume31
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Feb 2022

Keywords

  • SERPINB7
  • acral peeling skin syndrome
  • cell adhesion
  • keratoderma
  • protease inhibitor

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Dermatology
  • Molecular Biology
  • Biochemistry

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