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DOCK11 deficiency in patients with X-linked actinopathy and autoimmunity

Authors :
Charlotte Boussard
Laure Delage
Tania Gajardo
Alexandre Kauskot
Maxime Batignes
Nicolas Goudin
Marie-Claude Stolzenberg
Camille Brunaud
Patricia Panikulam
Quentin Riller
Maryse Moya-Nilges
Jean Solarz
Christelle Reperant
Béatrice Durel
Jean-Claude Bordet
Olivier Pellé
Corinne Lebreton
Aude Magerus-Chatinet
Vithura Pirabakaran
Pablo Vargas
Sébastien Dupichaud
Marie Jeanpierre
Angélique Vinit
Mohammed Zarhrate
Cécile Masson
Nathalie Aladjidi
Peter D Arkwright
Brigitte Bader-Meunier
Sandrine Baron Joly
Joy Benadiba
Elise Bernard
Dominique Berrebi
Christine Bodemer
Martin Castelle
Fabienne Charbit-Henrion
Marwa Chbihi
Agathe Debray
Philippe Drabent
Sylvie Fraitag
Miguel Hié
Judith Landman-Parker
Ludovic Lhermitte
Despina Moshous
Pierre Rohrlich
Frank M Ruemmele
Anne Welfringer-Morin
Maud Tusseau
Alexandre Belot
Nadine Cerf-Bensussan
Marie Roelens
Capucine Picard
Bénédicte Neven
Alain Fischer
Isabelle Callebaut
Mickaël Mathieu Ménager
Fernando E Sepulveda
Frédéric Adam
Frédéric Rieux-Laucat
Source :
Blood.
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Society of Hematology, 2023.

Abstract

Dedicator of cytokinesis (DOCK) proteins play a central role in actin cytoskeleton regulation. This is highlighted by the DOCK2 and DOCK8 deficiencies leading to actinopathies and immune deficiencies. DOCK8 and DOCK11 activate CDC42, a RHO-GTPase involved in actin cytoskeleton dynamics, among many cellular functions. The role of DOCK11 in human immune disease has been long suspected but has never been described so far. We studied eight male patients, from seven unrelated families, with hemizygous DOCK11 missense variants leading to reduced DOCK11 expression. The patients were presenting with early-onset autoimmunity, including cytopenia, systemic lupus erythematosus, skin, and digestive manifestations. Patients' platelets exhibited abnormal ultrastructural morphology and spreading as well as impaired CDC42 activity. In vitro activated T cells and B lymphoblastoid cell lines (B-LCL) of patients exhibited aberrant protrusions and abnormal migration speed in confined channels concomitant with altered actin polymerization during migration. A DOCK11 knock-down recapitulated these abnormal cellular phenotypes in monocytes-derived dendritic cells (MDDC) and primary activated T cells from healthy controls. Lastly, in line with the patients' autoimmune manifestations, we also observed abnormal regulatory T cells (Tregs) phenotype with profoundly reduced FOXP3 and IKZF2 expression. Moreover, we found a reduced T cell proliferation and an impaired STAT5B phosphorylation upon IL2 stimulation of the patients' lymphocytes. In conclusion, DOCK11 deficiency is a new X-linked immune-related actinopathy leading to impaired CDC42 activity and STAT5 activation, and associated with abnormal actin cytoskeleton remodeling as well as Tregs phenotype culminating in immune dysregulation and severe early-onset autoimmunity.

Details

ISSN :
15280020 and 00064971
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Blood
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........dec96e6c500a8e49ae90f50f39299caa