Inborn errors of T cell development present a pediatric emergency in which timely curative therapy is informed by molecular diagnosis. In 11 affected patients across four consanguineous kindreds, we detected homozygosity for a single deleterious missense variant in the gene NudC domain–containing 3 (NUDCD3). Two infants had severe combined immunodeficiency with the complete absence of T and B cells (T -B- SCID), whereas nine showed classical features of Omenn syndrome (OS). Restricted antigen receptor gene usage by residual T lymphocytes suggested impaired V(D)J recombination. Patient cells showed reduced expression of NUDCD3 protein and diminished ability to support RAG-mediated recombination in vitro, which was associated with pathologic sequestration of RAG1 in the nucleoli. Although impaired V(D)J recombination in a mouse model bearing the homologous variant led to milder immunologic abnormalities, NUDCD3 is absolutely required for healthy T and B cell development in humans.
CITATION STYLE
Chen, R., Lukianova, E., van der Loeff, I. S., Spegarova, J. S., Willet, J. D. P., James, K. D., … Hambleton, S. (2024). NUDCD3 deficiency disrupts V(D)J recombination to cause SCID and Omenn syndrome. Science Immunology, 9(95). https://doi.org/10.1126/sciimmunol.ade5705
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