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Heterozygous splice mutation in PIK3R1 causes human immunodeficiency with lymphoproliferation due to dominant activation of PI3K

Authors :
Ying Wang
Susan Price
Joshua J McElwee
Ahmet Ozen
Michael Richards
Isil Barlan
Anthony Venida
Matthew Biancalana
Jason D. Hughes
Morgan Butrick
Yu Zhang
Helen F. Matthews
Michael J. Lenardo
Tamara C. Pozos
Helen C. Su
Carrie L. Lucas
V. Koneti Rao
Xiaochuan Wang
Source :
The Journal of Experimental Medicine
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Rockefeller University Press, 2014.

Abstract

Lucas et al. identify humans with a gain-of-function mutation in PIK3R1, encoding the p85α subunit of PI3K. The splice site mutation causes in-frame skipping of exon 11, resulting in altered p85α association with p110δ that stabilizes the catalytic subunit but fails to properly inhibit catalytic activity. The patients have immunodeficiency and lymphoproliferation with skewing of CD8+ T cells toward terminally differentiated and senescent effector cells that have shortened telomeres.<br />Class IA phosphatidylinositol 3-kinases (PI3K), which generate PIP3 as a signal for cell growth and proliferation, exist as an intracellular complex of a catalytic subunit bound to a regulatory subunit. We and others have previously reported that heterozygous mutations in PIK3CD encoding the p110δ catalytic PI3K subunit cause a unique disorder termed p110δ-activating mutations causing senescent T cells, lymphadenopathy, and immunodeficiency (PASLI) disease. We report four patients from three families with a similar disease who harbor a recently reported heterozygous splice site mutation in PIK3R1, which encodes the p85α, p55α, and p50α regulatory PI3K subunits. These patients suffer from recurrent sinopulmonary infections and lymphoproliferation, exhibit hyperactive PI3K signaling, and have prominent expansion and skewing of peripheral blood CD8+ T cells toward terminally differentiated senescent effector cells with short telomeres. The PIK3R1 splice site mutation causes skipping of an exon, corresponding to loss of amino acid residues 434–475 in the inter-SH2 domain. The mutant p85α protein is expressed at low levels in patient cells and activates PI3K signaling when overexpressed in T cells from healthy subjects due to qualitative and quantitative binding changes in the p85α–p110δ complex and failure of the C-terminal region to properly inhibit p110δ catalytic activity.

Details

ISSN :
15409538 and 00221007
Volume :
211
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Experimental Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1e64dbc67a8f29215ca42773ba5255dc
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.20141759