2 results match your criteria: "Dundee University School of Life Sciences[Affiliation]"

Multiple self-healing squamous epithelioma (MSSE), also known as Ferguson-Smith Disease, is a rare cancer-associated genodermatosis with an autosomal dominant inheritance. Affected patients suffer from recurrent skin lesions, which clinically and histologically resemble keratoacanthomas or well-differentiated squamous cell carcinomas, but which, if left, undergo spontaneous regression, leaving pronounced scarring. The majority of MSSE cases previously described were of Scottish ancestry and all shared the same at-risk haplotype, suggesting that this disorder was caused by a founder mutation.

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Background: Epidermolysis bullosa simplex (EBS) is an inherited skin fragility disorder caused by mutations in keratin intermediate filament proteins. While discoveries of these mutations have increased understanding of the role of keratins and other intermediate filaments in epithelial tissues, progress towards the development of therapy for these disorders is much slower.

Objectives: Cell culture model systems that display these structural defects are needed for analysis of the cellular consequences of the mutations and to enable possible therapeutic strategies to be developed.

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