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Germline hypomorphic CARD11 mutations in severe atopic disease.

Chi A MaJeffrey R StinsonYuan ZhangJordan K AbbottMichael A WeinreichPia J HaukPaul R ReynoldsJonathan J LyonsCeleste G NelsonElisa RuffoBatsukh DorjbalSalomé GlauzyNatsuko YamakawaSwadhinya ArjunarajaKelsey VossJennifer StoddardJulie NiemelaYu ZhangSergio D RosenzweigJoshua J McElweeThomas DiMaggioHelen F MatthewsNina JonesKelly D StoneAlejandro PalmaMatías OleastroEmma PrietoAndrea R BernasconiGeronimo DubraSilvia DanielianJonathan ZaiatMarcelo A MartiBrian KimMegan A CooperNeil RombergEric MeffreErwin W GelfandAndrew L SnowJoshua D Milner
Published in: Nature genetics (2017)
Few monogenic causes for severe manifestations of common allergic diseases have been identified. Through next-generation sequencing on a cohort of patients with severe atopic dermatitis with and without comorbid infections, we found eight individuals, from four families, with novel heterozygous mutations in CARD11, which encodes a scaffolding protein involved in lymphocyte receptor signaling. Disease improved over time in most patients. Transfection of mutant CARD11 expression constructs into T cell lines demonstrated both loss-of-function and dominant-interfering activity upon antigen receptor-induced activation of nuclear factor-κB and mammalian target of rapamycin complex 1 (mTORC1). Patient T cells had similar defects, as well as low production of the cytokine interferon-γ (IFN-γ). The mTORC1 and IFN-γ production defects were partially rescued by supplementation with glutamine, which requires CARD11 for import into T cells. Our findings indicate that a single hypomorphic mutation in CARD11 can cause potentially correctable cellular defects that lead to atopic dermatitis.
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