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Clinically Complex LRBA Deficiency Due to a Founder Allele in the Georgian Jewish Population

Authors :
Tal Freund
Sarah K. Baxter
Tom Walsh
Hana Golan
Joseph Kapelushnik
Michal Abramsohn-Goldenberg
Shira Benor
Nadav Sarid
Ron Ram
Yifat Alcalay
Reeval Segel
Paul Renbaum
Polina Stepensky
Mary-Claire King
Troy R. Torgerson
David Hagin
Source :
Journal of Clinical Immunology. 43:151-164
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022.

Abstract

Pathogenic variants in LRBA, encoding the LPS Responsive Beige-Like Anchor (LRBA) protein, are responsible for recessive, early-onset hypogammaglobulinemia, severe multi-organ autoimmunity, and lymphoproliferation, with increased risk for malignancy. LRBA deficiency has a wide clinical spectrum with variable age of onset and disease severity. Three apparently unrelated patients with LRBA deficiency, of Georgian Jewish descent, were homozygous for LRBA c.6640C T, p.R2214*, leading to a stop upstream of the LRBA BEACH domain. Despite carrying the same LRBA genotype, the three patients differed in clinical course: the first patient was asymptomatic until age 25 years; the second presented with failure to thrive at age 3 months; and the third presented at age 7 years with immune cytopenias and severe infections. Two of the patients developed malignancies: the first patient was diagnosed with recurrent Hodgkin's disease at age 36 years, and the second patient developed aggressive gastric cancer at age 15 years. Among Georgian Jews, the carrier frequency of the LRBA p.R2214* allele was 1.6% (4 of 236 Georgian Jewish controls). The allele was absent from other populations. Haplotype analysis showed a shared origin of the mutation. These three patients revealed a pathogenic LRBA founder allele in the Georgian Jewish population, support the diverse and complex clinical spectrum of LRBA deficiency, and support the possibility that LRBA deficiency predisposes to malignancy.

Subjects

Subjects :
Immunology
Immunology and Allergy

Details

ISSN :
15732592 and 02719142
Volume :
43
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Clinical Immunology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f350bdb680d1fe2079e01a3345208412