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Journal ArticleDOI

X-chromosome inactivation: role in skin disease expression

Rudolf Happle
- 01 Apr 2006 - 
- Vol. 95, Iss: 451, pp 16-23
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TLDR
In the various X-linked skin disorders, affected women show quite dissimilar degrees of involvement and forms of manifestation because X inactivation may give rise to different patterns of functional mosaicism.
Abstract
UNLABELLED The occurrence of X inactivation in mammals has the consequence that all women are functional mosaics. In X-linked skin disorders, Lyonization usually gives rise to a mosaic pattern, as manifest by the appearance of the lines of Blaschko. This arrangement of lesions is observed in male-lethal X-linked traits, such as incontinentia pigmenti, focal dermal hypoplasia, Conradi-Hunermann-Happle syndrome, oral-facial-digital syndrome type 1 and MIDAS (microphthalmia, dermal aplasia and sclerocornea) syndrome, as well as in various X-linked non-lethal phenotypes, such as hypohidrotic ectodermal dysplasia of Christ-Siemens-Touraine, IFAP (ichthyosis follicularis-alopecia-photophobia) syndrome and X-linked dyskeratosis congenita. Analogous X-inactivation patterns have been documented in human bones, teeth, eyes and, possibly, the brain. Patterns that are distinct from the lines of Blaschko are also seen, such as the lateralization observed in CHILD (congenital hemidysplasia with ichthyosiform nevus and limb defects) syndrome, and the chequerboard pattern seen in women heterozygous for X-linked congenital hypertrichosis. Exceptional cases of either severe or absent involvement in a woman heterozygous for an X-linked trait can be explained by skewing of X inactivation. Some X-linked skin disorders are caused by genes that escape inactivation, which is why heterozygous female 'carriers' of these disorders do not show mosaicism. A well-known example is X-linked recessive ichthyosis due to steroid sulphatase deficiency, the locus for which is situated at the tip of the short arm of the X chromosome and does not undergo Lyonization. On the other hand, in the case of Fabry disease, the gene encoding alpha-galactosidase A is subject to inactivation. Remarkably, however, the skin lesions of women do not show a mosaic pattern. CONCLUSION In the various X-linked skin disorders, affected women show quite dissimilar degrees of involvement and forms of manifestation because X inactivation may give rise to different patterns of functional mosaicism. Paradoxically, no such pattern is observed in women with Fabry disease. Like many X-linked diseases, Fabry disease should neither be called recessive nor dominant, because these dichotomous terms are obscured by the mechanism of X inactivation.

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Citations
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A unified model for left–right asymmetry? Comparison and synthesis of molecular models of embryonic laterality

TL;DR: Experimental data are examined that lend strong support to an early origin of LR asymmetry, yet are also consistent with later roles for cilia in the amplification of LR pathways, and an alternative hypothesis is presented which proposes that individual embryos stochastically choose one of several possible pathways with which to establish their LR axis.
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Far From Solved: A Perspective on What We Know About Early Mechanisms of Left–Right Asymmetry

TL;DR: Analysis of specific predictions of each model and crucial recent data on new mutants suggest that ciliary function may not be a broadly conserved, initiating event in left–right patterning.
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X chromosome inactivation in clinical practice

TL;DR: This review focuses on medical issues related to XCI in X-linked disorders, and on the value of X inactivation analysis in clinical practice.
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Pathogenesis-based therapy reverses cutaneous abnormalities in an inherited disorder of distal cholesterol metabolism

TL;DR: Findings validate pathogenesis-based therapy that provides the deficient end-product and prevents accumulation of toxic metabolites, an approach of potential utility for other syndromic lipid metabolic disorders.
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Blaschko lines and other patterns of cutaneous mosaicism

TL;DR: The clinicopathologic spectrum of skin lesions that follow Blaschko lines is reviewed, highlighting the differential diagnoses, clues to correct categorization, and associated findings of inflammatory, hypopigmented, and hyperpigmented lesions with a mosaic distribution.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Gene Action in the X -chromosome of the Mouse ( Mus musculus L.)

TL;DR: Ohno and Hauschka1 showed that in female mice one chromosome of mammary carcinoma cells and of normal diploid cells of the ovary, mammary gland and liver was heteropyKnotic and suggested that the so-called sex chromatin was composed of one heteropyknotic X-chromosome.
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X-inactivation profile reveals extensive variability in X-linked gene expression in females

TL;DR: A comprehensive X-inactivation profile of the human X chromosome is presented, representing an estimated 95% of assayable genes in fibroblast-based test systems, and suggests a remarkable and previously unsuspected degree of expression heterogeneity among females.
Journal ArticleDOI

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Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: It is proposed that mammalian alleles with such characteristics should be termed metastable epialleles to distinguish them from traditional alleles.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mosaicism in Human Skin: Understanding the Patterns and Mechanisms

TL;DR: In this review, the various genetic mechanisms leading to mosaicism and the resulting cutaneous patterns are considered and the concept of cutaneous mosaicism is important for gene mapping because here the authors have the opportunity to study two populations of cells differing only with regard to the mutation causing mosaicism.
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