| Literature DB >> 32905580 |
Francesco Saettini1, Cecilia Poli2,3, Jaime Vengoechea4,5, Sonia Bonanomi1, Julio C Orellana6, Grazia Fazio7, Fred H Rodriguez8,9, Loreani P Noguera3, Claire Booth10, Valentina Jarur-Chamy3, Marissa Shams5, Maria Iascone11, Maja Vukic12, Serena Gasperini13, Manuel Quadri7, Amairelys Barroeta Seijas10, Elizabeth Rivers10, Mario Mauri14, Raffaele Badolato15, Gianni Cazzaniga7,14, Cristina Bugarin7, Giuseppe Gaipa7, Wilma G M Kroes16, Daniele Moratto17, Monique M van Oostaijen-Ten Dam18, Frank Baas16, Silvère van der Maarel12, Rocco Piazza14, Zeynep H Coban-Akdemir19,20, James R Lupski19,21, Bo Yuan19,20, Ivan K Chinn2,22, Lucia Daxinger12, Andrea Biondi1,7.
Abstract
Agammaglobulinemia is the most profound primary antibody deficiency that can occur due to an early termination of B-cell development. We here investigated 3 novel patients, including the first known adult, from unrelated families with agammaglobulinemia, recurrent infections, and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM). Two of them also presented with intermittent or severe chronic neutropenia. We identified homozygous or compound-heterozygous variants in the gene for folliculin interacting protein 1 (FNIP1), leading to loss of the FNIP1 protein. B-cell metabolism, including mitochondrial numbers and activity and phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase/AKT pathway, was impaired. These defects recapitulated the Fnip1-/- animal model. Moreover, we identified either uniparental disomy or copy-number variants (CNVs) in 2 patients, expanding the variant spectrum of this novel inborn error of immunity. The results indicate that FNIP1 deficiency can be caused by complex genetic mechanisms and support the clinical utility of exome sequencing and CNV analysis in patients with broad phenotypes, including agammaglobulinemia and HCM. FNIP1 deficiency is a novel inborn error of immunity characterized by early and severe B-cell development defect, agammaglobulinemia, variable neutropenia, and HCM. Our findings elucidate a functional and relevant role of FNIP1 in B-cell development and metabolism and potentially neutrophil activity.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 32905580 PMCID: PMC7845007 DOI: 10.1182/blood.2020006441
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Blood ISSN: 0006-4971 Impact factor: 22.113