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A deep intronic splice mutation of STAT3 underlies hyper IgE syndrome by negative dominance

Authors :
Henrik Molina
Vivien Béziat
Alain Lefevre-Utile
Marie-Olivia Chandesris
Danielle T. Avery
Maya Chrabieh
Stéphanie Boisson-Dupuis
Anne Puel
Tanwir Habib
Françoise Sarrot-Reynauld
Aziz Belkadi
Hanan Alwaseem
Geetha Rao
Agathe Senechal
Stuart G. Tangye
Qian Zhang
Olivier Lortholary
Bertrand Boisson
Joëlle Khourieh
Xiao-Fei Kong
Capucine Picard
Virginie Grandin
Nico Marr
Jean-Laurent Casanova
Laurent Abel
Source :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 116:16463-16472
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2019.

Abstract

Heterozygous in-frame mutations in coding regions of human STAT3 underlie the only known autosomal dominant form of hyper IgE syndrome (AD HIES). About 5% of familial cases remain unexplained. The mutant proteins are loss-of-function and dominant-negative when tested following overproduction in recipient cells. However, the production of mutant proteins has not been detected and quantified in the cells of heterozygous patients. We report a deep intronic heterozygous STAT3 mutation, c.1282-89C>T, in 7 relatives with AD HIES. This mutation creates a new exon in the STAT3 complementary DNA, which, when overexpressed, generates a mutant STAT3 protein (D427ins17) that is loss-of-function and dominant-negative in terms of tyrosine phosphorylation, DNA binding, and transcriptional activity. In immortalized B cells from these patients, the D427ins17 protein was 2 kDa larger and 4-fold less abundant than wild-type STAT3, on mass spectrometry. The patients’ primary B and T lymphocytes responded poorly to STAT3-dependent cytokines. These findings are reminiscent of the impaired responses of leukocytes from other patients with AD HIES due to typical STAT3 coding mutations, providing further evidence for the dominance of the mutant intronic allele. These findings highlight the importance of sequencing STAT3 introns in patients with HIES without candidate variants in coding regions and essential splice sites. They also show that AD HIES-causing STAT3 mutant alleles can be dominant-negative even if the encoded protein is produced in significantly smaller amounts than wild-type STAT3.

Details

ISSN :
10916490 and 00278424
Volume :
116
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d6fd149df639c39ad42fc571356b2dee