A subject with a novel type I bare lymphocyte syndrome has tapasin deficiency due to deletion of 4 exons by Alu-mediated recombination

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Abstract

HLA class I expression depends on the formation of a peptide-loading complex composed of class I heavy chain; β2-microglobulin; the transporter associated with antigen processing (TAP); and tapasin, which links TAP to the heavy chain. Defects in TAP result in a class I deficiency called the type I bare lymphocyte syndrome (BLS). In the present study, we examined a subject with a novel type I BLS who does not exhibit apparent TAP abnormalities but who has a tapasin defect. The subject's TAPASIN gene has a 7.4-kilobase deletion between introns 3 and 7; an Alu repeat-mediated unequal homologous recombination may be the cause of the deletion. No tapasin polypeptide was detected in the subject's cells. The cell surface class I expression level in tapasin-deficient cells was markedly reduced but the reduction was not as profound as in TAP-deficient cells. These results suggest that tapasin deficiency is another cause of type I BLS. © 2002 by The American Society of Hematology.

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Yabe, T., Kawamura, S., Sato, M., Kashiwase, K., Tanaka, H., Ishikawa, Y., … Juji, T. (2002). A subject with a novel type I bare lymphocyte syndrome has tapasin deficiency due to deletion of 4 exons by Alu-mediated recombination. Blood, 100(4), 1496–1498. https://doi.org/10.1182/blood-2001-12-0252

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