| Literature DB >> 26900472 |
Ankmalika G Louis1, Leman Yel1, Jia N Cao1, Sudhanshu Agrawal1, Sudhir Gupta1.
Abstract
Common variable immunodeficiency (CVID) is a heterogenous disorder characterized by hypogammaglobulinemia and impaired specific antibody response and increased susceptibility to infections, autoimmunity and malignancies. A number of gene mutations, including ICOS, TACI and BAFF-R, and CD19, CD20, CD21, CD81, MSH5 and LRBA have been described; however, they account for approximately 20-25% of total cases of CVID. In this study, we report a patient with CVID with an intrinsic microdeletion of chromosome 1q42.1-42.3, where gene for inositol 1,3,4, trisphosphate kinase β (ITPKB) is localized. ITPKB has an important role in the development, survival and function of B cells. In this subject, the expression of ITPKB mRNA as well as ITKPB protein was significantly reduced. The sequencing of ITPKB gene revealed three variants, two of them were missense variants and third was a synonymous variant; the significance of each of them in relation to CVID is discussed. This case suggests that a deficiency of ITPKB may have a role in CVID.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26900472 PMCID: PMC4735063 DOI: 10.1038/cti.2015.41
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Transl Immunology ISSN: 2050-0068
Figure 1Fluorescent in situ hybridization analysis showing heterozygotic microdeletion of chromosome 1q42.1-42.3 (arrows). The top panel shows the wcp1 staining, and the bottom panel shows the presence of subtelomere region.
Immunological features of a patient with CVID
| CD3+ | 744 (62%) | 844–2395 (65–80%) |
| CD3+CD4+ | 504 (42%) | 437–1597 (31–56%) |
| CD3+CD8+ | 204 (17%) | 281–1125 (17–34%) |
| CD4+/CD8+ ratio | 2.57 | 0.78–2.21 |
| CD19+ | 60 (5%) | 132–399 (4–16%) |
| CD3-CD56+CD16+ | 36 (3%) | 120–424 (4–16%) |
| Mumps | 42 | 2052–26 495 |
| Tetanus toxoid | 762 | 6092–94 539 |
| | 279 | 13 249–60 917 |
| PPD | 174 | 548–2580 |
| PHA | 83 013 | 114 881–289 206 |
| Con A | 97 975 | 131 199–252 925 |
| PWM | 15 320 | 20 171–78 728 |
| IgG | 516 | 694–1618 |
| IgA | 44 | 68–378 |
| IgM | 95 | 65–263 |
| IgE (IU l−1) | 110 | 10–150 |
| | 0.0–0.3 | >1.3 |
| CH50 (U ml−1) | 267 | (101–300) |
| C3 (mg dl−1) | 113 | (88–201) |
| C4 (mg dl−1) | 31 | (16–47) |
| Unactivated | 54 | 70 |
| PMA-activated | 404 | 873 |
| Ratio of activated/unactivated | 7.5 | 12.5 |
Abbreviations: ConA, concanavalin A; CVID, common variable immunodeficiency; Ig, immunoglobulin; MFI, mean fluorescence intensity; PHA, phytohemagglutinin; PMA, phorbol myristate acetate; PPD, purified protein derivative; PWM, pokeweed mitogen.
After Pneumovax-23 response. Patient did not respond to any of the 14 serotypes.
1.3 protective titers. × 4 fold increase following Pneumovax-23 against at least 70% serotypes.
Figure 2A flow cyometric graph of B-cell subsets in a patient and a healthy control (a). (b) B-cell subsets in the patient as compared with 20 healthy controls. Marginal zone (MZ), transitional B cells, IgM memory B cells and CD21lo B cells were increased.
Figure 3A flow cytometric graph of Treg cells (top panel). Cells were gated on CD4+ T cells and then examined for the expression of CD25, CD127 and FoxP3. Bottom panel shows the patient's Treg as compared with 20 healthy controls. Treg were calculated as percent positive of total foxp3 cells in CD4 population=(CD4+) × (CD25 high CD127 low) × (foxp3+ve)/(10 000). In the patient, CD4+CD25+CD127loFoxP3+ Treg cells were markedly reduced as compared with control.
Figure 4RT-PCR for ITPKB mRNA. RT-PCR was performed on activated PBMCs (anti-CD3 for 6 h) from the patient and two healthy controls using specific primers and ACTB as a housekeeping gene. Top panel (a) shows a gel and the bottom panel (b) show quantitation of gels by densitometer. A significant decreased in ITPKB mRNA was observed.
Figure 5qRT-PCR for ITPKB mRNA. Quantitative RT-PCR was performed on freshly isolated PBMCs using specific primers. Three different samples from the patient were obtained at different time intervals. A significantly reduced ITPKB mRNA was observed.
Figure 6ITPKB protein expression. Western blotting was performed on protein extracted from mononuclear cells using specific anti-ITPKB antibody and GAPDH as internal loading control. Top panel shows gel and bottom panel shows quantitation of gels measured by densitometry and expressed as the ratio of ITPKB/GAPDH, which show markedly deceased expression of ITPKB in the patient.
Figure 7Three variants of ITPKB gene and their locations.
Allele frequencies of ITPKB reported by UCSC
| dbSNP: rs6667260: |
| A: 44.423% (3664.890/8250); |
| Coding annotations by dbSNP: |
| ITPKB (NM_002221): missense variant S ( |
| dbSNP: rs708776: |
| Coding annotations by dbSNP: |
| ITPKB (NM_002221): missense variant P (C |
| dbSNP: rs708775: |
| C: 71.623% (7217.720/10077.330); |
| Coding annotations by dbSNP: |
| ITPKB (NM_002221): synonymous variant A (GC |
Bold letter indicates the nucleotide of variance from patient.
Primers for ITPKB gene cloning and sequencing
| Exon I | GGGCCCCTGAACCGAAGAGC | CGCCAGCAGAGCCGCCCCGAGAC | 474 |
| Exon II a | TTCTGCAGGCGACCCCCAACT | CTCAAACATGCCCACTTTCTGG | 725 |
| Exon II b | GCTATGCGCTCAATAGCCTG | CGGAGTCGGTTCCTGAAGTC | 638 |
| Exon II c | CCGGAGGAGGCCAAGAGGAAG | ACGGTGTGGCCCAGTGGATGTAAC | 582 |
| Exon II d1 | AGTTACATCCACTGGGCCAC | AGATCTTTCGCAGCGTCCC | 537 |
| Exon II d2 | GGGGGCGTTGGCAGCTCTCCGACAG | CCGGACTTGGGAGGGCATCACTGT | 336 |
| Exon II e | GGCAGAATGCTGGAGCCTT | CATGAGTTCTGGGCAAATCTCA | 550 |
| Exon III | CATAGGTGATGGTGGTGGCA | TCCAGAGAGGTCCGTTGTCTAT | 450 |
| Exon IV | GTGCTCAGTCCATAGCAGGG | GGAGGCTCTAATTGGTCCAACA | 450 |
| Exon V | TCGGAAAGACGTGCCTTG | CAAATGTCTGGCCTTGGG | 500 |
| Exon VI | AGGTTCAGATGGGGCTCG | GGATTACAGGCGTGAGCCAC | 430 |
| Exon VII | CTCTAGATGTCCGGCGTTTAGG | GTGCAGCGAGGGTCTGGT | 343 |
| Exon VIII | TGCAGGCACCCAACTGTC | GTAGGGTCCCCTCAGCAGC | 670 |