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CD154 variants associated with hyper-IgM syndrome can form oligomers and trigger CD40-mediated signals

Authors :
Barbara Ehrenfels
Ellen Garber
Yen-Ming Hsu
Lihe Su
Michael Karpusas
Source :
The Journal of biological chemistry. 274(47)
Publication Year :
1999

Abstract

X-linked hyper-IgM syndrome is a rare immunodeficiency disorder resulting from mutations in the gene encoding the CD40 ligand (CD154) molecule. These mutations are very heterogeneous, ranging from a single point mutation to a large deletion in the open reading frame. To investigate the molecular mechanisms that are responsible for the functional defect of these mutants, we examined the biochemical properties of 14 hyper-IgM-related CD154 mutant proteins produced by transient expression in COS7 cells. We show that deletion mutants lacking a significant portion of the tumor necrosis factor homologous domain cannot be stably produced. In contrast, point mutants can be detected as oligomers. Surprisingly, gene products of two point mutants, Thr-211 → Asp and Met-36 → Arg, can bind to the receptor, CD40. For Thr-211 → Asp variant, it is comparable to the wild-type protein in its surface expression level, biochemical structure, and functional activities. Thus, it appears that this mutation is a polymorphism of CD154 gene. For Met-36 → Arg variant, although it is interactive with CD40, it has a much lower surface expression level than wild-type protein. We propose that Met-36 → Arg mutant represents a prototype of a defective CD154 family whose low cell surface expression of intrinsically active protein is simply insufficient to trigger productive signals through CD40.

Details

ISSN :
00219258
Volume :
274
Issue :
47
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of biological chemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1b1d6bba4993bc11c1af18b3922baffb