Volume 53, Issue 12 pp. 1478-1480
Medical Genetics

Bathing suit ichthyosis caused by a TGM1 mutation in a Tunisian child

Rym Benmously-Mlika MD

Corresponding Author

Rym Benmously-Mlika MD

Department of Dermatology, Habib Thameur Teaching Hospital, Faculty of Medicine, University of Tunis El Manar, Tunis, Tunisia

Correspondence

Rym Benmously-Mlika, md

Department of Dermatology

Habib Thameur Teaching Hospital

8 Ali Ben Ayed Street

Montfleury

1008 Tunis

Tunisia

E-mail: [email protected]

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Anissa Zaouak MD

Anissa Zaouak MD

Department of Dermatology, Habib Thameur Teaching Hospital, Faculty of Medicine, University of Tunis El Manar, Tunis, Tunisia

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Ridha Mrad MD

Ridha Mrad MD

Department of Human Genetics, Charles Nicolle Hospital, Tunis, Tunisia

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Nadia Laaroussi PhD

Nadia Laaroussi PhD

Molecular Investigation of Genetic Orphan Diseases Research Unit, Pasteur Institute of Tunis, Tunis, Tunisia

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Sonia Abdelhak PhD

Sonia Abdelhak PhD

Molecular Investigation of Genetic Orphan Diseases Research Unit, Pasteur Institute of Tunis, Tunis, Tunisia

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Alain Hovnanian PhD

Alain Hovnanian PhD

Department of Dermatology and Genetics, CHU Necker for Sick Children, University René Descartes, Paris, France

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Insaf Mokhtar MD
First published: 10 September 2014
Citations: 10
Funding: None.
Conflicts of interest: None.

Abstract

Background

Bathing suit ichthyosis (BSI) is an uncommon phenotype classified as a minor variant of autosomal recessive congenital ichthyosis (ARCI).

Objectives

We report a case of BSI in a 3-year-old Tunisian girl with a novel mutation of the transglutaminase 1 gene (TGM1).

Case Report

This infant had been born with a collodion membrane encasing her entire body. From the age of three months, brownish scaling was noted on the bathing suit area. Histology showed orthohyperkeratosis with acanthosis of the epidermis. The granular layer was normal, and the superficial dermis was mildly inflammatory, confirming a diagnosis of proliferating ichthyosis. Molecular analysis in the patient and her parents revealed the mutation I304F of TGM1. Treatment with emollients and keratolytics partially improved the patient's skin condition.

Conclusions

Bathing suit ichthyosis is an uncommon phenotype unique in its topography, which involves the trunk but spares the face and extremities. Previous studies using molecular analysis have shown that BSI is caused mainly by mutations in TGM1. Twenty missense mutations have been reported in BSI. Of these 20 missense mutations, nine occurred only in patients with the BSI phenotype and 11 were common to BSI and other types of ARCI. Until recently, there has been no genotype-phenotype correlation. Therefore, the same mutation of the transglutaminase 1 could result in either generalized ARCI or BSI. The present case demonstrates this phenotype in a White Tunisian patient with a novel mutation of TGM1 (I304F) not previously reported in BSI.

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