Human Autosomal Recessive DNA Polymerase Delta 3 Deficiency Presenting as Omenn Syndrome.
Maria Rodrigo RiestraBethany A PillayMathijs WillemsenVerena KienapfelLisa EhlersSelket DelafontaineAntoine PintonMarjon WoutersAnneleen HombrouckKate SauerXavier BossuytArnout VoetStefaan J SoenenCecilia Dominguez CondeGiorgia BucciolKaan BoztugStephanie Humblet-BaronAurore TouzartFrédéric Rieux-LaucatLuigi D NotarangeloLeen MoensIsabelle MeytsPublished in: Journal of clinical immunology (2023)
The DNA polymerase δ complex (PolD), comprising catalytic subunit POLD1 and accessory subunits POLD2, POLD3, and POLD4, is essential for DNA synthesis and is central to genome integrity. We identified, by whole exome sequencing, a homozygous missense mutation (c.1118A > C; p.K373T) in POLD3 in a patient with Omenn syndrome. The patient exhibited severely decreased numbers of naïve T cells associated with a restricted T-cell receptor repertoire and a defect in the early stages of TCR recombination. The patient received hematopoietic stem cell transplantation at age 6 months. He manifested progressive neurological regression and ultimately died at age 4 years. We performed molecular and functional analysis of the mutant POLD3 and assessed cell cycle progression as well as replication-associated DNA damage. Patient fibroblasts showed a marked defect in S-phase entry and an enhanced number of double-stranded DNA break-associated foci despite normal expression levels of PolD components. The cell cycle defect was rescued by transduction with WT POLD3. This study validates autosomal recessive POLD3 deficiency as a novel cause of profound T-cell deficiency and Omenn syndrome.