Homozygous truncating PTPRF mutation causes athelia

  • Guntram Borck
  • Liat de Vries
  • Hsin-Jung Wu
  • Pola Smirin-Yosef
  • Gudrun Nürnberg
  • Irina Lagovsky
  • Luis Henrique Ishida
  • Patrick Thierry
  • Dagmar Wieczorek
  • Peter Nürnberg
  • John Foley
  • Christian Kubisch (Shared last author)
  • Lina Basel-Vanagaite (Shared last author)

Abstract

Athelia is a very rare entity that is defined by the absence of the nipple-areola complex. It can affect either sex and is mostly part of syndromes including other congenital or ectodermal anomalies, such as limb-mammary syndrome, scalp-ear-nipple syndrome, or ectodermal dysplasias. Here, we report on three children from two branches of an extended consanguineous Israeli Arab family, a girl and two boys, who presented with a spectrum of nipple anomalies ranging from unilateral hypothelia to bilateral athelia but no other consistently associated anomalies except a characteristic eyebrow shape. Using homozygosity mapping after single nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) array genotyping and candidate gene sequencing we identified a homozygous frameshift mutation in PTPRF as the likely cause of nipple anomalies in this family. PTPRF encodes a receptor-type protein phosphatase that localizes to adherens junctions and may be involved in the regulation of epithelial cell-cell contacts, peptide growth factor signaling, and the canonical Wnt pathway. Together with previous reports on female mutant Ptprf mice, which have a lactation defect, and disruption of one allele of PTPRF by a balanced translocation in a woman with amastia, our results indicate a key role for PTPRF in the development of the nipple-areola region.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
ISSN0340-6717
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 01.08.2014
Externally publishedYes
PubMed 24781087