Mutations in Recessive Congenital Ichthyoses Illuminate the Origin and Functions of the Corneocyte Lipid Envelope.

  • Crumrine, Debra
  • Khnykin, Denis
  • Krieg, Peter
  • Man, Mao-Qiang
  • Celli, Anna
  • Mauro, Theodora M
  • Wakefield, Joan S
  • Menon, Gopinathan
  • Mauldin, Elizabeth
  • Miner, Jeffrey H
  • Lin, Meei-Hua
  • Brash, Alan R
  • Sprecher, Eli
  • Radner, Franz PW
  • Choate, Keith
  • Roop, Dennis
  • Uchida, Yoshikazu
  • Gruber, Robert
  • Schmuth, Matthias
  • Elias, Peter M
Publication date
April 2019
Publisher
eScholarship, University of California

Abstract

The corneocyte lipid envelope (CLE), a monolayer of ω-hydroxyceramides whose function(s) remain(s) uncertain, is absent in patients with autosomal recessive congenital ichthyoses with mutations in enzymes that regulate epidermal lipid synthesis. Secreted lipids fail to transform into lamellar membranes in certain autosomal recessive congenital ichthyosis epidermis, suggesting the CLE provides a scaffold for the extracellular lamellae. However, because cornified envelopes are attenuated in these autosomal recessive congenital ichthyoses, the CLE may also provide a scaffold for subjacent cornified envelope formation, evidenced by restoration of cornified envelopes after CLE rescue. We provide multiple lines of evidence that the CLE originates...

Extracted data

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