Volume 136, Issue 6 pp. 817-822

Immunohistochemical analysis of the skin in junctional epidermolysis bullosa using laminin 5 chain specific antibodies is of limited value in predicting the underlying gene mutation

J.R. MCMILLAN

J.R. MCMILLAN

St John's Institute of Dermatology (UMDS), St Thomas'Hospital, London, U.K.

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J.A. MCGRATH

Corresponding Author

J.A. MCGRATH

St John's Institute of Dermatology (UMDS), St Thomas'Hospital, London, U.K.

Dr J.A.McGrath, Department of Cell Pathology, St John's Institute of Dermatology, St Thomas's Hospital, Lambeth Palace Road, London SEl 7EH, U.K.Search for more papers by this author
L. PULKKINEN

L. PULKKINEN

Department of Dermatology and Cutaneous Biology, Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia PA, U.S.A.

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A. KON

A. KON

Department of Dermatology and Cutaneous Biology, Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia PA, U.S.A.

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R.E. BURGESON

R.E. BURGESON

Department of Cutaneous Biology Research Center, Charleston MA, U.S.A.

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J-P. ORTONNE

J-P. ORTONNE

Department of U385 INSERM, Faculté de Médicine, Nice Cedex 2, France

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G. MENEGUZZI

G. MENEGUZZI

Department of U385 INSERM, Faculté de Médicine, Nice Cedex 2, France

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J. UITTO

J. UITTO

Department of Dermatology and Cutaneous Biology, Jefferson Medical College, Philadelphia PA, U.S.A.

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R.A.J. EADY

R.A.J. EADY

St John's Institute of Dermatology (UMDS), St Thomas'Hospital, London, U.K.

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First published: 28 June 2008
Citations: 12

Summary

The anchoring filament protein laminin 5 is composed of three polypeptide chains (α3, β3 and γ2) each encoded by separate genes (LAMA3, LAMB3 and LAMC2, respectively). Mutations in any of these three genes may give rise to the autosomal recessive blistering skin disease, junctional epidermolysis bullosa. At present, there is no easy way of predicting which of these three genes might harbour the pathogenetic laminin 5 mutations in a case of junctional epidermolysis bullosa. In this study, we assessed whether immunohistochemistry might be helpful in this regard. We performed immunohistochemical labelling of the dermal-epidermal junction using α3, β3 and γ2 chain-specific antibodies in 11 patients with junctional epidermolysis bullosa, in whom the laminin 5 mutations had been previously delineated. Although, labelling for the laminin 5 chain bearing the mutations was attenuated or undetectable in all cases, a complete absence of labelling or a reduction in the staining intensity for the other two chains was also seen in all cases. The results showed that immunohistochemical labelling of the dermal-epidermal junction using α3, β3 and γ2 chainspecific antibodies is not a specific indicator for which of the laminin 5 chain genes contains the pathogenetic mutations, and is therefore unreliable in screening for individual laminin 5 gene mutations in cases of junctional epidermolysis bullosa.

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