Adult-onset hereditary pulmonary alveolar proteinosis caused by a single-base deletion in CSF2RB

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Abstract

Background: Disruption of granulocyte/macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) signalling causes pulmonary alveolar proteinosis (PAP). Rarely, genetic defects in neonatal or infant-onset PAP have been identified in CSF2RA. However, no report has clearly identified any function-associated genetic defect in CSF2RB. Methods and results: The patient was diagnosed with PAP at the age of 36 and developed respiratory failure. She was negative for GM-CSF autoantibody and had no underlying disease. Signalling and genetic defects in GM-CSF receptor were screened. GM-CSF-stimulated STAT5 phosphorylation was not observed and GM-CSFRbc expression was defective in the patient's blood cells. Genetic screening revealed a homozygous, single-base deletion at nt 631 in exon 6 of CSF2RB on chromosome 22, which caused reductions in GM-CSF dependent signalling and function. Both parents, who were second cousins, showed no pulmonary symptoms, and had normal GM-CSF-signalling, but had a CSF2RB allele with the identical deletion, indicating that the mutant allele may give rise to PAP in an autosomal recessive manner. Conclusions: This is the first report identifying a genetic defect in CSF2RB that causes deficiency of GM-CSF-Rβc expression and impaired signalling downstream. These results suggested that GM-CSF signalling was compensated by other signalling pathways, leading to adult-onset PAP.

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APA

Tanaka, T., Motoi, N., Tsuchihashi, Y., Tazawa, R., Kaneko, C., Nei, T., … Morimoto, K. (2011). Adult-onset hereditary pulmonary alveolar proteinosis caused by a single-base deletion in CSF2RB. Journal of Medical Genetics, 48(3), 205–209. https://doi.org/10.1136/jmg.2010.082586

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