%0 Case Reports %T Hidrotic ectodermal dysplasia in a Chinese pedigree: A case report. %A Liao MY %A Peng H %A Li LN %A Yang T %A Xiong SY %A Ye XY %J World J Clin Cases %V 11 %N 6 %D Feb 2023 26 %M 36926140 %F 1.534 %R 10.12998/wjcc.v11.i6.1403 %X BACKGROUND: We report on a large family of Chinese Han individuals with hidrotic ectodermal dysplasia (HED) with a variation in GJB6 (c.31G>A). The patients in the family had a triad of clinical manifestations of varying degrees. Although the same variation locus have been reported, the clinical manifestations of this family were difficult to distinguish from those of congenital thick nail disorder, palmoplantar keratosis, and congenital hypotrichosis.
METHODS: This investigation involved a large Chinese family of 46 members across five generations and included 12 patients with HED. The proband (IV4) was a male patient with normal sweat gland function and dental development, no skeletal dysplasia, no cognitive disability, and no hearing impairments. His parents were not consanguineously married. Physical examination of the proband revealed thinning hair and thickened grayish-yellow nails and toenails with some longitudinal ridges, in addition to mild bilateral palmoplantar hyperkeratosis. GJB6, GJB2, and GJA1 have been reported to be the causative genes of HED; therefore, we subjected the patient's samples to Sanger sequencing of these three genes. In this family, the variation locus was at GJB6 (c.31G>A, p.Gly11Arg). Overexpression vectors of wild-type GJB6 and its variants were established and transfected into HaCaT cell models, and the related mRNA and protein expression changes were determined using real-time reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction and Western blot, respectively.
CONCLUSIONS: We report another HED phenotype associated with GJB6 variations, which can help clinicians to diagnose HED despite its varying presentations.