4.7 Article

Oligoclonal expansion of T lymphocytes with multiple second-site mutations leads to Omenn syndrome in a patient with RAG1-deficient severe combined immunodeficiency

Journal

BLOOD
Volume 106, Issue 6, Pages 2099-2101

Publisher

AMER SOC HEMATOLOGY
DOI: 10.1182/blood-2005-03-0936

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Omenn syndrome (OS) is a rare primary immunodeficiency characterized by the presence of activated/oligoclonal T cells, eosinophilia, and the absence of circulating B cells. OS patients carry leaky mutations of recombination activating genes (RAG1 or RAG2) resulting in partial V(D)J recombination activity, whereas null mutations cause severe combined immunodeficiency with absence of mature T and B cells (T-B- SCID). Here we describe somatic mosaicism due to multiple second-site mutations in a patient with RAG1 deficiency. We found that he is homozygous for a single base deletion in the RAG1 gene, which results in frameshift and likely abrogates the protein function. However, the patient showed typical OS features. Molecular analysis revealed that several second-site mutations, all of which restored the RAG1 reading frame and resulted in missense mutations, were demonstrated in his T cells. These findings suggest that his revertant T-cell mosaicism is responsible for OS phenotype switched from T-B- SCID.

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