Recurrent Mycobacterium avium osteomyelitis associated with a novel dominant interferon gamma receptor mutation.

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Abstract

Mycobacterium avium causes infections in immunocompromised individuals. Recurrent infection with this organism has been associated with a deletion at the 818 residue of the interferon-gamma receptor (IFN-gammaR). This mutation produces a truncated receptor without an intracytoplasmic tail, resulting in diminished signaling. We describe a substitution at the 832 residue of the IFN-gammaR causing a similar truncated receptor in a 7-year-old girl with recurrent M avium osteomyelitis.

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Villella, A., Picard, C., Jouanguy, E., Dupuis, S., Popko, S., Abughali, N., … Hostoffer, R. W. (2001). Recurrent Mycobacterium avium osteomyelitis associated with a novel dominant interferon gamma receptor mutation. Pediatrics, 107(4). https://doi.org/10.1542/peds.107.4.e47

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