Login / Signup

A CVID-associated variant in the ciliogenesis protein CCDC28B disrupts immune synapse assembly.

Nagaja CapitaniAnna OnnisFrancesca FinettiChiara CassioliAlessandro PlebaniJlenia BrunettiArianna TroiloSofia D'EliosManuela BaronioLuisa GazzurelliChiara Della BellaDaniel D BilladeauMario Milco D'EliosVassilios LougarisCosima Tatiana Baldari
Published in: Cell death and differentiation (2021)
Ciliogenesis proteins orchestrate vesicular trafficking pathways that regulate immune synapse (IS) assembly in the non-ciliated T-cells. We hypothesized that ciliogenesis-related genes might be disease candidates for common variable immunodeficiency with impaired T-cell function (T-CVID). We identified a heterozygous, predicted pathogenic variant in the ciliogenesis protein CCDC28B present with increased frequency in a large CVID cohort. We show that CCDC28B participates in IS assembly by regulating polarized T-cell antigen receptor (TCR) recycling. This involves the CCDC28B-dependent, FAM21-mediated recruitment of the actin regulator WASH to retromer at early endosomes to promote actin polymerization. The CVID-associated CCDC28BR25W variant failed to interact with FAM21, leading to impaired synaptic TCR recycling. CVID T cells carrying the ccdc28b 211 C > T allele displayed IS defects mapping to this pathway that were corrected by overexpression of the wild-type allele. These results identify a new disease gene in T-CVID and pinpoint CCDC28B as a new player in IS assembly.
Keyphrases
  • wild type
  • gene expression
  • protein protein
  • high resolution
  • transcription factor
  • early onset
  • mass spectrometry
  • immune response
  • dna methylation
  • genome wide
  • dendritic cells