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KCTD1/KCTD15 complexes control ectodermal and neural crest cell functions, and their impairment causes aplasia cutis
Jackelyn R. Raymundo, … , Luigi Vitagliano, Alexander G. Marneros
Jackelyn R. Raymundo, … , Luigi Vitagliano, Alexander G. Marneros
Published December 19, 2023
Citation Information: J Clin Invest. 2024;134(4):e174138. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI174138.
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Research Article Dermatology Development

KCTD1/KCTD15 complexes control ectodermal and neural crest cell functions, and their impairment causes aplasia cutis

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Abstract

Aplasia cutis congenita (ACC) is a congenital epidermal defect of the midline scalp and has been proposed to be due to a primary keratinocyte abnormality. Why it forms mainly at this anatomic site has remained a long-standing enigma. KCTD1 mutations cause ACC, ectodermal abnormalities, and kidney fibrosis, whereas KCTD15 mutations cause ACC and cardiac outflow tract abnormalities. Here, we found that KCTD1 and KCTD15 can form multimeric complexes and can compensate for each other’s loss and that disease mutations are dominant negative, resulting in lack of KCTD1/KCTD15 function. We demonstrated that KCTD15 is critical for cardiac outflow tract development, whereas KCTD1 regulates distal nephron function. Combined inactivation of KCTD1/KCTD15 in keratinocytes resulted in abnormal skin appendages but not in ACC. Instead, KCTD1/KCTD15 inactivation in neural crest cells resulted in ACC linked to midline skull defects, demonstrating that ACC is not caused by a primary defect in keratinocytes but is a secondary consequence of impaired cranial neural crest cells, giving rise to midline cranial suture cells that express keratinocyte-promoting growth factors. Our findings explain the clinical observations in patients with KCTD1 versus KCTD15 mutations, establish KCTD1/KCTD15 complexes as critical regulators of ectodermal and neural crest cell functions, and define ACC as a neurocristopathy.

Authors

Jackelyn R. Raymundo, Hui Zhang, Giovanni Smaldone, Wenjuan Zhu, Kathleen E. Daly, Benjamin J. Glennon, Giovanni Pecoraro, Marco Salvatore, William A. Devine, Cecilia W. Lo, Luigi Vitagliano, Alexander G. Marneros

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Figure 3

ACC-associated KCTD1 mutants sequester normal KCTD15 protein in amyloid-like aggregates and the ACC-associated KCTD15D104H mutant sequesters normal KCTD1 protein in amyloid-like aggregates.

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ACC-associated KCTD1 mutants sequester normal KCTD15 protein in amyloid-...
KCTD1WT (green) and KCTD15WT (red) proteins show an overlapping expression pattern in HEK293 cells and do not form amyloid-like aggregates. In contrast, KCTD1H74P and KCTD1G62D mutants sequester both KCTD1WT and KCTD15WT in amyloid-like aggregates. The KCTD15D104H mutant sequesters KCTD1WT in amyloid-like aggregates. Scale bars: 10 μm.

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ISSN: 0021-9738 (print), 1558-8238 (online)

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