JID Innovations (Jul 2023)

Relevance of Coding Variation in FLG And DOCK8 in Finnish Pediatric Patients with Early-Onset Moderate-To-Severe Atopic Dermatitis

  • Miia Perälä,
  • Meri Kaustio,
  • Alexander Salava,
  • Eveliina Jakkula,
  • Anna S. Pelkonen,
  • Janna Saarela,
  • Anita Remitz,
  • Mika J. Mäkelä

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3, no. 4
p. 100203

Abstract

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Early-onset, persistent atopic dermatitis (AD) is proposed as a distinct subgroup that may have specific genotypic features. FLG gene loss-of-function variants are the best known genetic factors contributing to epidermal barrier impairment and eczema severity. In a cohort of 140 Finnish children with early-onset moderate-to-severe AD, we investigated the effect of coding variation in FLG and 13 other genes with epidermal barrier or immune function through the use of targeted amplicon sequencing and genotyping. A FLG loss-of-function variant (Arg501Ter, Ser761fs, Arg2447Ter, or Ser3247Ter) was identified in 20 of 140 patients showing higher transepidermal water loss values than patients without these variants. Total FLG loss-of-function variant frequency (7.14%) was significantly higher than in the general Finnish population (2.34%). When tested separately, only Arg2447Ter showed a significant association with AD (P = 0.003104). In addition, a modest association with moderate-to-severe pediatric AD was seen for rs12730241 and rs6587667 (FLG2:Gly137Glu). Loss-of-function variants, previously reported pathogenic variants, or statistically significant enrichment of nonsynonymous coding region variants were not found in the 13 candidate genes studied by amplicon sequencing. However, higher IgE and eosinophil counts were found in carriers of potentially pathogenic DOCK8 missense variants, suggesting that the role of DOCK8 variation in AD should be further investigated in larger cohorts.