Publications
A recurrent dominant negative E47 mutation causes agammaglobulinemia and BCR(-) B cells
Abstract
Approximately 90% of patients with isolated agammaglobulinemia and failure of B cell development have mutations in genes required for signaling through the pre-B cell and B cell receptors. The nature of the gene defect in the majority of remaining patients is unknown. We recently identified 4 patients with agammaglobulinemia and markedly decreased numbers of peripheral B cells. The B cells that could be detected had an unusual phenotype characterized by the increased expression of CD19 but the absence of a B cell receptor. Genetic studies demonstrated that all 4 patients had the exact same de novo mutation in the broadly expressed transcription factor E47. The mutant protein (E555K) was stable in patient-derived EBV-transformed cell lines and cell lines transfected with expression vectors. E555K in the transfected cells localized normally to the nucleus and resulted in a dominant negative effect when bound to DNA as a homodimer with wild-type E47. Mutant E47 did permit DNA binding by a tissue-specific heterodimeric DNA-binding partner, myogenic differentiation 1 (MYOD). These findings document a mutational hot-spot in E47 and represent an autosomal dominant form of agammaglobulinemia. Further, they indicate that E47 plays a critical role in enforcing the block in development of B cell precursors that lack functional antigen receptors.
Type | Journal |
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Authors | Boisson, B.; Wang, Y. D.; Bosompem, A.; Ma, C. S.; Lim, A.; Kochetkov, T.; Tangye, S. G.; Casanova, J. L.; Conley, M. E.: |
Publisher Name | JOURNAL OF CLINICAL INVESTIGATION |
Published Date | 2013-12-01 |
Published Volume | 123 |
Published Issue | 11 |
Published Pages | 4781-5 |
Status | Published in-print |
DOI | 10.1172/JCI71927 |
URL link to publisher's version | http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24216514 |
OpenAccess link to author's accepted manuscript version | https://publications.gimr.garvan.org.au/open-access/11853 |