Deleterious Mutations in LRBA Are Associated with a Syndrome of Immune Deficiency and Autoimmunity

  • Lopez-Herrera, Gabriela
  • Tampella, Giacomo
  • Pan-Hammarström, Qiang
  • Herholz, Peer
  • Trujillo-Vargas, Claudia M.
  • Phadwal, Kanchan
  • Simon, Anna Katharina
  • Moutschen, Michel
  • Etzioni, Amos
  • Mory, Adi
  • Srugo, Izhak
  • Melamed, Doron
  • Hultenby, Kjell
  • Liu, Chonghai
  • Baronio, Manuela
  • Vitali, Massimiliano
  • Philippet, Pierre
  • Dideberg, Vinciane
  • Aghamohammadi, Asghar
  • Rezaei, Nima
  • Enright, Victoria
  • Du, Likun
  • Salzer, Ulrich
  • Eibel, Hermann
  • Pfeifer, Dietmar
  • Veelken, Hendrik
  • Stauss, Hans
  • Lougaris, Vassilios
  • Plebani, Alessandro
  • Gertz, E. Michael
  • Schäffer, Alejandro A.
  • Hammarström, Lennart
  • Grimbacher, Bodo
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Publication date
June 2012
Publisher
The American Society of Human Genetics. Published by Elsevier Inc.

Abstract

Most autosomal genetic causes of childhood-onset hypogammaglobulinemia are currently not well understood. Most affected individuals are simplex cases, but both autosomal-dominant and autosomal-recessive inheritance have been described. We performed genetic linkage analysis in consanguineous families affected by hypogammaglobulinemia. Four consanguineous families with childhood-onset humoral immune deficiency and features of autoimmunity shared genotype evidence for a linkage interval on chromosome 4q. Sequencing of positional candidate genes revealed that in each family, affected individuals had a distinct homozygous mutation in LRBA (lipopolysaccharide responsive beige-like anchor protein). All LRBA mutations segregated with the disease be...

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