Clinical and immunologic features of a recently recognized X-linked combined immunodeficiency disease (XCID) suggested that XCID and X-linked severe combined immunodeficiency (XSCID) might arise from different genetic defects. The recent discovery of mutations in the common γ chain (γ(c)) gene, a constituent of several cytokine receptors, in XSCID provided an opportunity to test directly whether a previously unrecognized mutation in this same gene was responsible for XCID. The status of X chromosome inactivation in blood leukocytes from obligate carriers of XCID was determined from the polymorphic, short tandem repeats (CAG)(n) in the androgen receptor gene, which also contains a methylation-sensitive HpaII site. As in XSCID, X-chromosome inactivation in obligate carriers of XCID was nonrandom in T and B lymphocytes. In addition, X chromosome inactivation in PMNs was variable. Findings from this analysis prompted sequencing of the γ(c) gene in this pedigree. A missense mutation in the region coding for the cytoplasmic portion of the γ(c) gene was found in three affected males but not in a normal brother. Therefore, this point mutation in the γ(c) gene leads to a less severe degree of deficiency in cellular and humoral immunity than that seen in XSCID.
CITATION STYLE
Schmalstieg, F. C., Leonard, W. J., Noguchi, M., Berg, M., Rudloff, H. E., Denney, R. M., … Goldman, A. S. (1995). Missense mutation in exon 7 of the common γ chain gene causes a moderate form of X-linked combined immunodeficiency. Journal of Clinical Investigation, 95(3), 1169–1173. https://doi.org/10.1172/JCI117765
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