| Literature DB >> 32845957 |
Hye Sun Kuehn1, Julie E Niemela1, Jennifer Stoddard1, Sara Ciullini Mannurita2, Tala Shahin3,4,5, Shubham Goel1, Mary Hintermeyer6, Raul Jimenez Heredia3,4,5, Mary Garofalo1, Laura Lucas7, Smriti Singh8, Annalisa Tondo9, Zachary Jacobs10, William A Gahl11, Sylvain Latour12, James Verbsky6, John Routes6, Charlotte Cunningham-Rundles13, Kaan Boztug3,4,5,14, Eleonora Gambineri2, Thomas A Fleisher1, Shanmuganathan Chandrakasan7, Sergio D Rosenzweig1.
Abstract
IKAROS is a transcription factor forming homo- and heterodimers and regulating lymphocyte development and function. Germline mutations affecting the IKAROS N-terminal DNA binding domain, acting in a haploinsufficient or dominant-negative manner, cause immunodeficiency. Herein, we describe 4 germline heterozygous IKAROS variants affecting its C-terminal dimerization domain, via haploinsufficiency, in 4 unrelated families. Index patients presented with hematologic disease consisting of cytopenias (thrombocytopenia, anemia, neutropenia)/Evans syndrome and malignancies (T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia, Burkitt lymphoma). These dimerization defective mutants disrupt homo- and heterodimerization in a complete or partial manner, but they do not affect the wild-type allele function. Moreover, they alter key mechanisms of IKAROS gene regulation, including sumoylation, protein stability, and the recruitment of the nucleosome remodeling and deacetylase complex; none affected in N-terminal DNA binding defects. These C-terminal dimerization mutations are largely associated with hematologic disorders, display dimerization haploinsufficiency and incomplete clinical penetrance, and differ from previously reported allelic variants in their mechanism of action. Dimerization mutants contribute to the growing spectrum of IKAROS-associated diseases displaying a genotype-phenotype correlation.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 32845957 PMCID: PMC7819759 DOI: 10.1182/blood.2020007292
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 25.476