X-Linked Cutis Laxa
- 10 July 1980
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Massachusetts Medical Society in New England Journal of Medicine
- Vol. 303 (2) , 61-65
- https://doi.org/10.1056/nejm198007103030201
Abstract
We studied several members of a family with an X-linked form of cutis laxa; the affected males have mild skin laxity, a characteristic facies, skeletal abnormalities, structural abnormalities of the genitourinary tract, and low serum copper levels. The activity of lysyl oxidase, a copper-dependent enzyme involved in cross-link formation in collagen, was decreased in skin-biopsy specimens (13 to 26 per cent of normal) and in culture medium from cells of two affected males (15 to 20 per cent of normal). Immunoreactive lysyl oxidase from skin of both patients was virtually undetectable by immunodiffusion assay. The amounts of lysyl-derived aldehydes (the product formed in collagen and elastin by lysyl oxidase) and of cross-links formed from these products were decreased in dermal fibroblasts in culture. Collagen extractability from these cells was increased in culture. These findings suggest that lysyl oxidase deficiency provides the biochemical basis of the X-linked form of cutis laxa. (N Engl J Med. 1980; 303:61–5.)This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Ehlers-Danlos syndrome: an analysis of the structure of the collagen fibres of the skinBritish Journal of Dermatology, 1980
- Cross-linking of collagen in the X-linked Ehlers-Danlos Type VBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1979
- A study of copper treatment and tissue copper levels in the murine congenital copper deficiency, mottledLife Sciences, 1976
- Cutis laxa. Ultrastructural and biochemical studiesArchives of Dermatology, 1975
- Lysyl Oxidase Deficiency in Ehlers–Danlos Syndrome Type VConnective Tissue Research, 1975
- Cultivated Cells from Diagnostic Amniocentesis in Second Trimester Pregnancies. I. Clonal Morphology and Growth PotentialPediatric Research, 1974
- Primary defect in copper transport underlies mottled mutants in the mouseNature, 1974
- The dominant and recessive forms of cutis laxa.Journal of Medical Genetics, 1972
- Use of a mixture of proteinase-free collagenases for the specific assay of radioactive collagen in the presence of other proteinsBiochemistry, 1971
- Ehlers‐Danlos syndrome and cutis laxa: an account of families in the Oxford areaAnnals of Human Genetics, 1962