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Biochemically deleterious human NFKB1 variants underlie an autosomal dominant form of common variable immunodeficiency

Authors :
Peng Zhang
Katharina Thoma
Bingnan Lyu
Gulbu Uzel
Juan Li
Boualem Hammadi
András N Spaan
Jamila El Baghdadi
Alexandra F. Freeman
Charlotte Cunningham-Rundles
Yu Zhang
Jean-Laurent Casanova
Claire Fieschi
Franck Rapaport
Jérémie Rosain
Vivien Béziat
Simon J. Pelham
Wei-Te Lei
Anne Puel
Maya Chrabieh
Helen C. Su
V. Koneti Rao
David Hum
Stéphanie Boisson-Dupuis
Jacinta Bustamante
Mélanie Migaud
Anne-Sophie Korganow
Qian Zhang
Aurélie Cobat
Steven M. Holland
Laurent Abel
Vishukumar Aimanianda
Bertrand Boisson
Manfred Fliegauf
Benedetta Bigio
Bodo Grimbacher
Yoann Seeleuthner
Takaki Asano
Carol J Saunders
Shen-Ying Zhang
Emmanuelle Jouanguy
Source :
Journal of Experimental Medicine. 218
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Rockefeller University Press, 2021.

Abstract

Autosomal dominant (AD) NFKB1 deficiency is thought to be the most common genetic etiology of common variable immunodeficiency (CVID). However, the causal link between NFKB1 variants and CVID has not been demonstrated experimentally and genetically, as there has been insufficient biochemical characterization and enrichment analysis. We show that the cotransfection of NFKB1-deficient HEK293T cells (lacking both p105 and its cleaved form p50) with a κB reporter, NFKB1/p105, and a homodimerization-defective RELA/p65 mutant results in p50:p65 heterodimer–dependent and p65:p65 homodimer–independent transcriptional activation. We found that 59 of the 90 variants in patients with CVID or related conditions were loss of function or hypomorphic. By contrast, 258 of 260 variants in the general population or patients with unrelated conditions were neutral. None of the deleterious variants displayed negative dominance. The enrichment in deleterious NFKB1 variants of patients with CVID was selective and highly significant (P = 2.78 × 10−15). NFKB1 variants disrupting NFKB1/p50 transcriptional activity thus underlie AD CVID by haploinsufficiency, whereas neutral variants in this assay should not be considered causal.

Details

ISSN :
15409538 and 00221007
Volume :
218
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Experimental Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d5ac8d2da4117487a80552a370fb8fde
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1084/jem.20210566