Publications by authors named "Satomi Aoki"

Article Synopsis
  • Porokeratosis is a skin disorder caused by genetic alterations in the mevalonate pathway and can be hereditary or non-hereditary based on specific gene involvement.
  • This study identified non-hereditary porokeratosis linked to epigenetic changes in the FDFT1 gene, which affects keratinocyte growth and leads to distinct skin lesions.
  • Treatment with topical statins showed improvement in lesions, highlighting the potential for targeted therapies based on genetic and epigenetic factors in porokeratosis.
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Article Synopsis
  • In certain genetic cases, a second-hit mutation can occur in an embryo, leading to a condition called superimposed mosaicism, where both healthy and defective copies of a gene are present.
  • The study reports two unrelated cases of Hailey-Hailey disease (HHD) exhibiting this type of mosaicism, where one case had a new, inherited mutation and the other involved a father with the variant but no symptoms.
  • Both cases highlight that superimposed mosaicism can occur without a known family history of the disease, stressing the importance of genetic analysis for accurately diagnosing and assessing familial risks.
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Cutis laxa (CL) comprises a heterogeneous group of entities mainly classified as X-linked, autosomal dominant and recessive forms, which differ in severity. We encountered a CL baby with no familial history. We performed targeted exome sequencing, and detected a de novo heterozygous frameshift mutation in the elastin gene of the baby.

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Pierre-Robin sequence (PRS) is a rare, congenital defect presenting with micrognathia, glossoptosis, and airway obstruction with variable inclusion of a cleft palate. Overlapping PRS with neurofibromatosis type 2 (NF2) is a syndrome caused by a chromosome 22q12 microdeletion including NF2. We describe a patient with severe early-onset NF2 overlapping with PRS that showed micrognathia, glossoptosis, and a mild form of cleft palate.

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The epidermis is a stratified epithelium. Compared to that for monolayered epithelia, understanding of the cell biology of stratified epithelia lags far behind. The major reason for this is the limitation of methods to reproduce the epidermis in vitro using cultured keratinocytes: for example, cultured keratinocyte cell sheets lack Langerhans cells, melanocytes, nerves, sweat ducts, and hair follicles.

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FGFR3 encodes a transmembrane receptor tyrosine kinase that has six autophosphorylation sites of tyrosine. Among them, Y770 is a negative regulatory site for the downstream signaling of FGFR3. Constitutive active mutations in FGFR3 are involved in human developmental disorders including familial acanthosis nigricans, an autosomal dominant disorder characterized by general hyperpigmentation with mild acanthosis of the epidermis.

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Patients with disseminated superficial actinic porokeratosis (DSAP) and linear porokeratosis (LP) exhibit monoallelic germline mutations in genes encoding mevalonate pathway enzymes, such as MVD or MVK. Here, we showed that each skin lesion of DSAP exhibited an individual second hit genetic change in the wild-type allele of the corresponding gene specifically in the epidermis, indicating that a postnatal second hit triggering biallelic deficiency of the gene is required for porokeratosis to develop. Most skin lesions exhibited one of two principal second hits, either somatic homologous recombinations rendering the monoallelic mutation biallelic or C>T transition mutations in the wild-type allele.

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The vaccine strains against influenza virus A/H3N2 for the 2010-2011 season and influenza virus B for the 2009-2010 and 2010-2011 seasons in Japan are a high-growth reassortant A/Victoria/210/2009 (X-187) strain and an egg-adapted B/Brisbane/60/2008 (Victoria lineage) strain, respectively. Hemagglutination inhibition (HI) tests with postinfection ferret antisera indicated that the antisera raised against the X-187 and egg-adapted B/Brisbane/60/2008 vaccine production strains poorly inhibited recent epidemic isolates of MDCK-grown A/H3N2 and B/Victoria lineage viruses, respectively. The low reactivity of the ferret antisera may be attributable to changes in the hemagglutinin (HA) protein of production strains during egg adaptation.

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