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Journal ArticleDOI

Genomic rearrangement in NEMO impairs NF-kappaB activation and is a cause of incontinentia pigmenti. The International Incontinentia Pigmenti (IP) Consortium.

TLDR
Most cases of familial incontinentia pigmenti are due to mutations of this locus and that a new genomic rearrangement accounts for 80% of new mutations, which means that NF-κB activation is defective in IP cells.
Abstract
Familial incontinentia pigmenti (IP; MIM 308310) is a genodermatosis that segregates as an X-linked dominant disorder and is usually lethal prenatally in males. In affected females it causes highly variable abnormalities of the skin, hair, nails, teeth, eyes and central nervous system. The prominent skin signs occur in four classic cutaneous stages: perinatal inflammatory vesicles, verrucous patches, a distinctive pattern of hyperpigmentation and dermal scarring. Cells expressing the mutated X chromosome are eliminated selectively around the time of birth, so females with IP exhibit extremely skewed X-inactivation. The reasons for cell death in females and in utero lethality in males are unknown. The locus for IP has been linked genetically to the factor VIII gene in Xq28 (ref. 3). The gene for NEMO (NF-kappaB essential modulator)/IKKgamma (IkappaB kinase-gamma) has been mapped to a position 200 kilobases proximal to the factor VIII locus. NEMO is required for the activation of the transcription factor NF-kappaB and is therefore central to many immune, inflammatory and apoptotic pathways. Here we show that most cases of IP are due to mutations of this locus and that a new genomic rearrangement accounts for 80% of new mutations. As a consequence, NF-kappaB activation is defective in IP cells.

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Physical and genetic characterization reveals a pseudogene, an evolutionary junction, and unstable loci in distal Xq28.

TL;DR: Haplotype analysis showed that a segment within Xq28 has resisted excessive interchromosomal exchange through great ape evolution, potentially accounting for the linkage disequilibrium recently reported in this region.
Journal ArticleDOI

Secondary cicatricial and other permanent alopecias.

TL;DR: Various nonfollicular scalp conditions can cause secondary scarring or permanent alopecia, and detection of the underlying disorder may be difficult in end‐stage lesions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Histopathologic and trypsin digestion studies of the retina in incontinentia pigmenti.

TL;DR: Patients with retinal manifestations of incontinentia pigmenti may progress to proliferative vitreoretinopathy or retinal detachment and should be observed closely over the course of their lifetime.
Journal ArticleDOI

The p53 tumor suppressor protein protects against chemotherapeutic stress and apoptosis in human medulloblastoma cells.

TL;DR: It is reported that the experimental drug VMY-1-103 acts through induction of a partial DNA damage-like response as well induction of non-survival autophagy, and the genetic or chemical silencing of p53 significantly enhanced the cytotoxic effects of both VMY and the DNA damaging drug, doxorubicin.
Journal ArticleDOI

How clinicians add to knowledge of development.

TL;DR: Studies of human birth defects and developmental disorders have allowed identification of important developmental genes, and revealed mechanisms such as uniparental disomy and unstable trinucleotide repeats that were not suspected from animal studies.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

NF-kappa B and Rel proteins: evolutionarily conserved mediators of immune responses

TL;DR: Recently, significant advances have been made in elucidating the details of the pathways through which signals are transmitted to the NF-kappa B:I kappa B complex in the cytosol and their implications for the study of NF-Kappa B.
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Suppression of TNF-α-Induced Apoptosis by NF-κB

TL;DR: In this paper, the sensitivity and kinetics of TNF-α-induced apoptosis were shown to be enhanced in a number of cell types expressing a dominant negative IkappaBalpha (Ikappa-BalphaM).
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Embryonic lethality and liver degeneration in mice lacking the RelA component of NF-kappa B.

TL;DR: Results indicate that RelA controls inducible, but not basal, transcription in NF-κB-regulated pathways, and suggest that tumour necrosis factor-mediated induction of messenger RNAs for IκBα and granulocyte/macrophage colony stimulating factor (GM-CSF) is defective, although basal levels of these transcripts are unaltered.
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Complementation Cloning of NEMO, a Component of the IκB Kinase Complex Essential for NF-κB Activation

TL;DR: A flat cellular variant of HTLV-1 Tax-transformed rat fibroblasts, 5R, which is unresponsive to all tested NF-κB activating stimuli is characterized, and its genetic complementation is reported.
Journal ArticleDOI

Requirement for NF-κB in osteoclast and B-cell development

TL;DR: It is demonstrated that unlike the respective single knockout mice, the p50/p52 double knockout mice fail to generate mature osteoclasts and B cells, apparently because of defects that track with these lineages in adoptive transfer experiments.
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