Back to Search Start Over

Inherited SLP76 deficiency in humans causes severe combined immunodeficiency, neutrophil and platelet defects

Authors :
Atar Lev
Helly Vernitsky
Raz Somech
Gideon Rechavi
Maria Papazian
Tali Stauber
Ninette Amariglio
Deborah Yablonski
Sarina Levy-Mendelovich
Amos J. Simon
Baruch Wolach
Neta Shwartz
Ido Somekh
Yuan Zhang
Ayal Hendel
Ronit Gavrieli
Guangping Sun
Yu Nee Lee
Elisheva Javasky
Tal Beit Halevi
Shiran Levy
Chi Ma
Ortal Barel
Joshua D. Milner
Keren S Zrihen
Enas Hallumi
Source :
The Journal of Experimental Medicine
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Rockefeller University Press, 2020.

Abstract

SLP76 is a key molecule involved in the T cell signaling pathway; therefore, SLP76 deficiency can lead to a severe type of immunodeficiency. By reporting on a patient with germline mutation in SLP76, deficiency in this gene is linked, for the first time, to a human disease.<br />The T cell receptor (TCR) signaling pathway is an ensemble of numerous proteins that are crucial for an adequate immune response. Disruption of any protein involved in this pathway leads to severe immunodeficiency and unfavorable clinical outcomes. Here, we describe an infant with severe immunodeficiency who was found to have novel biallelic mutations in SLP76. SLP76 is a key protein involved in TCR signaling and in other hematopoietic pathways. Previous studies of this protein were performed using Jurkat-derived human leukemic T cell lines and SLP76-deficient mice. Our current study links this gene, for the first time, to a human immunodeficiency characterized by early-onset life-threatening infections, combined T and B cell immunodeficiency, severe neutrophil defects, and impaired platelet aggregation. Hereby, we characterized aspects of the patient's immune phenotype, modeled them with an SLP76-deficient Jurkat-derived T cell line, and rescued some consequences using ectopic expression of wild-type SLP76. Understanding human diseases due to SLP76 deficiency is helpful in explaining the mixed T cell and neutrophil defects, providing a guide for exploring human SLP76 biology.

Details

ISSN :
15409538 and 00221007
Volume :
218
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Experimental Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b8819a366a121400f90b9d039dca7f12
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.20201062