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Two Novel Homozygous Mutations in Phosphoglucomutase 3 Leading to Severe Combined Immunodeficiency, Skeletal Dysplasia, and Malformations

Authors :
Maria Veiga-da-Cunha
Aline Vincent
Jérémie Rosain
Martin Castelle
Jill Serre
Laurent Renesme
Valérie Cormier-Daire
Takfarinas Kentache
Benjamin Fournier
Sophie Blesson
Nathalie Aladjidi
Despina Moshous
Mathieu Fusaro
Eulalie Lasseaux
Capucine Picard
Fanny Morice Picard
Nathalie Seta
Bénédicte Neven
Anne-Lise Delezoide
Catherine Fallet-Bianco
Emile Van Schaftingen
UCL - SSS/DDUV/BCHM - Biochimie-Recherche métabolique
Source :
Journal of clinical immunology, Vol. 41, no. 5, p. 958-966 (2021)
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2021.

Abstract

Phosphoglucomutase 3 (PGM3) deficiency is a rare congenital disorder of glycosylation. Most of patients with autosomal recessive hypomorphic mutations in PGM3 encoding for phosphoglucomutase 3 present with eczema, skin and lung infections, elevated serum IgE, as well as neurological and skeletal features. A few PGM3-deficient patients suffer from a more severe disease with nearly absent T cells and severe skeletal dysplasia. We performed targeted next-generation sequencing on two kindred to identify the underlying genetic etiology of a severe combined immunodeficiency with developmental defect. We report here two novel homozygous missense variants (p.Gly359Asp and p.Met423Thr) in PGM3 identified in three patients from two unrelated kindreds with severe combined immunodeficiency, neurological impairment, and skeletal dysplasia. Both variants segregated with the disease in the two families. They were predicted to be deleterious by in silico analysis. PGM3 enzymatic activity was found to be severely impaired in primary fibroblasts and Epstein-Barr virus immortalized B cells from the kindred carrying the p.Met423Thr variant. Our findings support the pathogenicity of these two novel variants in severe PGM3 deficiency.

Details

ISSN :
15732592 and 02719142
Volume :
41
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Clinical Immunology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2a4ecf4b4daa146cf3e124405a3d3fef
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10875-021-00985-w