| Literature DB >> 34680870 |
Bárbara C S Reis1,2, Daniela P Cunha1,2, Ana Paula S Bueno3, Flavia A A Carvalho1,2, Juliana Dutra1, Fabiana V Mello3, Maria Cecília Menks Ribeiro3, Cristiane B Milito4, Elaine Sobral da Costa3,4, Zilton Vasconcelos1,2.
Abstract
Chronic Granulomatous Disease (CGD) is an inborn error of immunity characterized by impaired phagocyte function, recurrent fungal and bacterial infections and granuloma formation in multiple organs. Pediatric myelodysplastic Syndrome (MDS) is a rare hematological stem cell disease that leads to an ineffective hematopoiesis with variable risk of evolution to acute leukemias. Both disorders are rare and have distinct pathophysiologic mechanisms, with no known association. A 7-month-old boy presenting with recurrent infections and anemia at age 2 months underwent immunological, hematological and genetic investigation that culminated in the diagnosis of both CGD and MDS. Next generation sequencing was performed and identified a silent variant predicted as of Uncertain Significance, located in the splicing site at the end of exon 5 in CYBB. CYBB variants account for at least two thirds of CGD cases, but no previous descriptions of this variant were found in ClinVar or The Human Gene Mutation Database (HGMD) databases. We were able to demonstrate an exon 5 skipping on the proband's cDNA, which strongly suggests the disruption of the NADPH oxidase complex, abrogating the formation of reactive oxygen species from neutrophils. Moreover, erythroid cell lineage could be also affected by NADPH oxidase complex damages. Further investigation is needed to evaluate the potential effect of CYBB gene alterations in hematopoiesis, as well as in MDS and CGD association.Entities:
Keywords: chronic granulomatous disease; pediatric myelodysplastic syndrome; rare diseases
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34680870 PMCID: PMC8535487 DOI: 10.3390/genes12101476
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genes (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4425 Impact factor: 4.096
Figure 1(A) The proband’s family pedigree of affected patients displaying two generations. White circles with central dots represent carriers, the proband is represented as a black square. (B) Flow cytometry was used to assess fluorescence intensity increase after neutrophils stimulation with PMA in presence of DHR123 (grey histogram) and control with DHR only (faint histogram). In the healthy control, the curve shifts to the right, showing a neutrophil’s response. The proband’s curves before and after stimulation overlap, showing that there was no phagocyte respiratory burst. The curves of the proband’s mother and sister partially shift, revealing their carrier state, seeing as, because of their heterozygous variant, part of their neutrophils responds but the rest does not. SI = stimulation index. (C) Electropherogram from DNA showing homozygous variant on the proband, heterozygous variant on the proband’s mother, a mutation carrier, and homozygous wild type allele in a healthy control. (D) cDNA PCR products confirming a small fragment from the proband compatible with exon 5 skipping in comparison to a healthy control (HC) on agarose gel. Healthy control (HC), proband’s mother and sister were positive, while the proband was negative, suggesting intronic retention. MW: molecular weight. (E) Electropherogram from cDNA showing exon 5 skipping on the proband and continuous exon 4 to 6 in a healthy control (HC).
Figure 2Bone Marrow (BM) aspirate was characterized with (A) cytomorphology stained with MayGrunwald-Giemsa (MGG) that revealed myelodysplastic characteristics (dyserythropoiesis, dysmegakaryopoiesis, intercellular bridges, Pelguer-huet-like neutrophils and mitosis figure); (B–D) immunophenotyping sequentially performed a long of time that showed maintained maturative blockage in neutrophils (B), monocytes (C) and erythroid lineages (D). BM histopathology (E) stained with hematoxylin-eosin (HE) showed normal cellularity with atypical megakaryocytes. CD61 staining (F) showed small clusters of megakaryocytes and micromegakaryocytes. Glycophorin A (G) marked large and irregular groups of erythroblasts and CD34 (H) stained progenitor cells (1–2%). FISH (I) and interphase iFISH (J) showed chromosome 7 monosomy.
Bone marrow immunophenotype results.
| Bone Marrow Aspirate | Percentage | Differentiation | Specific Subtypes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Neutrophils | 65.8 | 0.2|I | |
| 3.3|II | |||
| 29.4|III | |||
| 32.9|IV | CD10 = 15.40 | ||
| Eosinophils | 3.8 | ||
| Monocytes | 5.0 | 0.7|I | CD34 = 0.08 |
| Erythroblasts | 3.0 | 0.5|I-II | |
| Basophils | 0.1 | ||
| Dendritic cells | 0.3 | ||
| T cells | 3.1 | ||
| B cells | 7.8 | ||
| NK 1 cells | 0.2 | ||
| Lymphoid CD34 2 cells | 1.2 | ||
| Myeloid CD34 2 cells | 1.0 | CD33 = 0.30 |
1 Natural killer; 2 Cluster Differentiation.