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Human immunodeficiency reveals GIMAP5 as lymphocyte-specific regulator of senescence

Authors :
Elif Karakoc Aydine
Helen C. Su
John C. Pascall
Ann Y Park
Safa Baris
Silvia Vilarinho
Jahnavi Aluri
Aaron Morawski
Yu Zhang
Lixin Zheng
Rick P. Lifton
V. Koneti Rao
Sinan Sari
Ahmet Ozen
Helen F. Matthews
Brittany Chao
Isil Barlan
Xijin Xu
Michael Leney-Greene
Ping Jiang
Michael J. Lenardo
Geoff W. Butcher
Matthew Lynberg
Ayca Kiykim
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2021.

Abstract

Elucidating the molecular basis of immunodeficiency diseases is a powerful approach to discovering new immunoregulatory pathways in humans. Here we report 10 affected individuals from 4 families with a new immunodeficiency disease comprising of severe progressive lymphopenia, autoimmunity, immunodeficiency, and liver disease due to recessive loss of function variants in “GTPase of immunity-associated proteins” protein 5 (GIMAP5). We show that the disease involves the progressive loss of naïve T lymphocytes and a corresponding increase in antigen-experienced, but poorly functional and replicatively senescent T cells. In vivo treatment of Gimap5-deficient mice with rapamycin (an inhibitor of mTORC1) significantly restores the fraction of naïve T lymphocytes. Furthermore, a GIMAP5-deficient human patient who was treated with rapamycin (sirolimus) showed a remarkable reduction in spleen/lymph node size. Together, these observations reveal that GIMAP5 plays a critical role in lymphocyte metabolism which is essential for senescence prevention and immune competence, suggesting that an inhibitor of mTORC1 could be a valuable clinical intervention in treating patients deficient for GIMAP5.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........a7744e76c49f30350b649da8b6037402
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.02.22.432146