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Inherited GINS1 deficiency underlies growth retardation along with neutropenia and NK cell deficiency.

Authors :
Cottineau J
Kottemann MC
Lach FP
Kang YH
Vély F
Deenick EK
Lazarov T
Gineau L
Wang Y
Farina A
Chansel M
Lorenzo L
Piperoglou C
Ma CS
Nitschke P
Belkadi A
Itan Y
Boisson B
Jabot-Hanin F
Picard C
Bustamante J
Eidenschenk C
Boucherit S
Aladjidi N
Lacombe D
Barat P
Qasim W
Hurst JA
Pollard AJ
Uhlig HH
Fieschi C
Michon J
Bermudez VP
Abel L
de Villartay JP
Geissmann F
Tangye SG
Hurwitz J
Vivier E
Casanova JL
Smogorzewska A
Jouanguy E
Source :
The Journal of clinical investigation [J Clin Invest] 2017 May 01; Vol. 127 (5), pp. 1991-2006. Date of Electronic Publication: 2017 Apr 17.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Inborn errors of DNA repair or replication underlie a variety of clinical phenotypes. We studied 5 patients from 4 kindreds, all of whom displayed intrauterine growth retardation, chronic neutropenia, and NK cell deficiency. Four of the 5 patients also had postnatal growth retardation. The association of neutropenia and NK cell deficiency, which is unusual among primary immunodeficiencies and bone marrow failures, was due to a blockade in the bone marrow and was mildly symptomatic. We discovered compound heterozygous rare mutations in Go-Ichi-Ni-San (GINS) complex subunit 1 (GINS1, also known as PSF1) in the 5 patients. The GINS complex is essential for eukaryotic DNA replication, and homozygous null mutations of GINS component-encoding genes are embryonic lethal in mice. The patients' fibroblasts displayed impaired GINS complex assembly, basal replication stress, impaired checkpoint signaling, defective cell cycle control, and genomic instability, which was rescued by WT GINS1. The residual levels of GINS1 activity reached 3% to 16% in patients' cells, depending on their GINS1 genotype, and correlated with the severity of growth retardation and the in vitro cellular phenotype. The levels of GINS1 activity did not influence the immunological phenotype, which was uniform. Autosomal recessive, partial GINS1 deficiency impairs DNA replication and underlies intra-uterine (and postnatal) growth retardation, chronic neutropenia, and NK cell deficiency.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1558-8238
Volume :
127
Issue :
5
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
The Journal of clinical investigation
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
28414293
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI90727