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T and B cell abnormalities, pneumocystis pneumonia, and chronic lymphocytic leukemia associated with an AIOLOS defect in patients
Author(s) -
Hye Sun Kuehn,
Jingjie Chang,
Motoi Yamashita,
Julie E. Niemela,
Chengcheng Zou,
Kazuki Okuyama,
Junji Harada,
Jennifer Stoddard,
Cristiane N. Santos,
Brigette Boast,
Ryan M. Baxter,
Elena W.Y. Hsieh,
Mary Garofalo,
Thomas A. Fleisher,
Tomohiro Morio,
Ichiro Taniuchi,
Cullen M. Dutmer,
Sergio D. Rosenzweig
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
the journal of experimental medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 8.483
H-Index - 448
eISSN - 1540-9538
pISSN - 0022-1007
DOI - 10.1084/jem.20211118
Subject(s) - chronic lymphocytic leukemia , biology , immunology , immunophenotyping , immunodeficiency , b cell , leukemia , antibody , flow cytometry , immune system
AIOLOS/IKZF3 is a member of the IKAROS family of transcription factors. IKAROS/IKZF1 mutations have been previously associated with different forms of primary immunodeficiency. Here we describe a novel combined immunodeficiency due to an IKZF3 mutation in a family presenting with T and B cell involvement, Pneumocystis jirovecii pneumonia, and/or chronic lymphocytic leukemia. Patients carrying the AIOLOS p.N160S heterozygous variant displayed impaired humoral responses, abnormal B cell development (high percentage of CD21low B cells and negative CD23 expression), and abrogated CD40 responses. Naive T cells were increased, T cell differentiation was abnormal, and CD40L expression was dysregulated. In vitro studies demonstrated that the mutant protein failed DNA binding and pericentromeric targeting. The mutant was fully penetrant and had a dominant-negative effect over WT AIOLOS but not WT IKAROS. The human immunophenotype was recapitulated in a murine model carrying the corresponding human mutation. As demonstrated here, AIOLOS plays a key role in T and B cell development in humans, and the particular gene variant described is strongly associated with immunodeficiency and likely malignancy.

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