Inducible CO-stimulator molecule, a candidate gene for defective isotype switching, is normal in patients with hyper-IgM syndrome of unknown molecular diagnosis

Inducible CO-stimulatory molecule (ICOS), the third member of the CD28/CTLA4 family, is expressed by activated T cells and interacts with its ligand (ICOSL, B7-related protein-1 [B7RP-1]) that is constitutively expressed by B cells. The interaction of ICOS with its ligand leads to terminal different...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of allergy and clinical immunology 2003-11, Vol.112 (5), p.958-964
Hauptverfasser: Lee, Wen-I, Zhu, Quli, Gambine, Eleonora, Jin, YinZhu, Welcher, Andrew A, Ochs, Hans D
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Inducible CO-stimulatory molecule (ICOS), the third member of the CD28/CTLA4 family, is expressed by activated T cells and interacts with its ligand (ICOSL, B7-related protein-1 [B7RP-1]) that is constitutively expressed by B cells. The interaction of ICOS with its ligand leads to terminal differentiation of B cells to plasma cells. ICOS-deficient mice fail to undergo immunoglobulin-class switch recombination (CSR) and germinal center formation, suggesting that ICOS could be a candidate gene for phenotypic hyper-IgM (HIGM) syndromes characterized by recurrent infections, low serum IgG and IgA, and normal or elevated IgM. Genetically, at least 4 distinct molecular defects have been identified that result in defective CSR and present as HIGM syndromes: defects of the CD40 ligand gene (CD40L; HIGM1, X-linked), the activation-induced cytidine deaminase gene (AID; HIGM2, autosomal recessive), the CD40 gene (HIGM3, autosomal recessive), and the nuclear factor-κB (NF-κB) essential modulator gene (NEMO, or IKK-γ, X-linked). In a substantial subgroup of HIGM patients, these 4 genes are normal, and the genetic defect is unknown. We sought to investigate the possibility that mutations of ICOS could account for some patients' belonging to this HIGM subgroup. The expression of ICOS protein by activated peripheral blood mononuclear cells and/or interleukin-2-dependent T cell lines derived from these patients was estimated by flow cytometery after incubation of the cells with the ICOS ligand fusion protein B7RP-1 Fc. The coding region and exon-intron boundaries of ICOS were assessed by sequence analysis. We studied 33 HIGM patients from 30 families, selected from an original cohort of 136 patients from 113 families, by excluding mutations of CD40L, AID, CD40, and NEMO. Activated T cells from all 33 patients expressed ICOS normally, and sequence analysis of the coding region and exon-intron boundaries revealed only wild-type ICOS, predicting that the protein structure is normal in this patient population. These findings strongly suggest that ICOS does not belong to the group of genes that, if mutated, present clinically as the HIGM syndrome.
ISSN:0091-6749
1097-6825
DOI:10.1016/S0091-6749(03)02021-9