Deficiency of somatic hypermutation of the antibody light chain is associated with increased frequency of severe respiratory tract infection in common variable immunodeficiency

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Abstract

Reduced levels of somatic hypermutation (SHM) have recently been described in IgG-switched immunoglobulin genes in a minority of patients with common variable immunodeficiency (CVID), demonstrating a disruption of the normal link-age between isotype switch and SHM. To see if, irrespective of isotype, there is a tendency to use unmutated immunoglobulin genes in CVID, we studied SHM in κ light-chain transcripts using a VκA27-specific restriction enzyme-based hot-spot mutation assay (IgκREHMA). Hot-spot mutations were found in 48% (median; reference interval, 28%-62%) of transcripts from 53 healthy controls. Values were significantly lower in 31 patients (median, 7.5%; range, 0%-73%; P < .0000001) of whom 24 (77%) had levels below the reference interval. Low levels of SHM correlated with increased frequency of severe respiratory tract infection (SRTI; P < .005), but not with diarrhea (P = .8). Mannose-binding lectin (MBL) deficiency also correlated with SRTI score (P = .009). However, the correlation of SHM and SRTI was also seen when only patients with normal MBL genotypes were analyzed (n = 18, P = .006). A slight decline of mutated fractions over years was noted (P = .01). This suggests that most patients with CVID fail to recruit affinity-maturated B cells, adding a qualitative deficiency to the quantitative deficiency characterizing these patients. © 2005 by The American Society of Hematology.

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Andersen, P., Permin, H., Andersen, V., Schejbel, L., Garred, P., Svejgaard, A., & Barington, T. (2005). Deficiency of somatic hypermutation of the antibody light chain is associated with increased frequency of severe respiratory tract infection in common variable immunodeficiency. Blood, 105(2), 511–517. https://doi.org/10.1182/blood-2003-12-4359

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