Mutations affecting the actin regulator WD repeat-containing protein 1 lead to aberrant lymphoid immunity.

Laurène Pfajfer,Nina K Mair, Raúl Jiménez-Heredia,Ferah Genel, Nesrin Gulez,Ömür Ardeniz, Birgit Hoeger,Sevgi Köstel Bal, Christoph Madritsch,Artem Kalinichenko, Rico Chandra Ardy,Bengü Gerçeker, Javier Rey-Barroso,Hanna Ijspeert, Stuart G Tangye,Ingrid Simonitsch-Klupp, Johannes B Huppa,Mirjam van der Burg, Loïc Dupré,Kaan Boztug

The Journal of allergy and clinical immunology(2018)

Cited 62|Views40
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Abstract
BACKGROUND:The actin-interacting protein WD repeat-containing protein 1 (WDR1) promotes cofilin-dependent actin filament turnover. Biallelic WDR1 mutations have been identified recently in an immunodeficiency/autoinflammatory syndrome with aberrant morphology and function of myeloid cells. OBJECTIVE:Given the pleiotropic expression of WDR1, here we investigated to what extent it might control the lymphoid arm of the immune system in human subjects. METHODS:Histologic and detailed immunologic analyses were performed to elucidate the role of WDR1 in the development and function of B and T lymphocytes. RESULTS:Here we identified novel homozygous and compound heterozygous WDR1 missense mutations in 6 patients belonging to 3 kindreds who presented with respiratory tract infections, skin ulceration, and stomatitis. In addition to defective adhesion and motility of neutrophils and monocytes, WDR1 deficiency was associated with aberrant T-cell activation and B-cell development. T lymphocytes appeared to develop normally in the patients, except for the follicular helper T-cell subset. However, peripheral T cells from the patients accumulated atypical actin structures at the immunologic synapse and displayed reduced calcium flux and mildly impaired proliferation on T-cell receptor stimulation. WDR1 deficiency was associated with even more severe abnormalities of the B-cell compartment, including peripheral B-cell lymphopenia, paucity of B-cell progenitors in the bone marrow, lack of switched memory B cells, reduced clonal diversity, abnormal B-cell spreading, and increased apoptosis on B-cell receptor/Toll-like receptor stimulation. CONCLUSION:Our study identifies a novel role for WDR1 in adaptive immunity, highlighting WDR1 as a central regulator of actin turnover during formation of the B-cell and T-cell immunologic synapses.
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