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  5. Recessive mutations in MCM4/PRKDC cause a novel syndrome involving a primary immunodeficiency and a disorder of DNA repair
 
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Recessive mutations in MCM4/PRKDC cause a novel syndrome involving a primary immunodeficiency and a disorder of DNA repair

Author(s)
Casey, Jillian  
Nobbs, Michael  
McGettigan, Paul A.  
Ennis, Sean  
et al.  
Uri
http://hdl.handle.net/10197/6162
Date Issued
2012-04
Date Available
2014-11-13T12:07:50Z
Abstract
Background: A study is presented of 10 children with a novel syndrome born to consanguineous parents from the Irish Traveller population. The syndrome is characterised by a natural killer (NK) cell deficiency, evidence of an atypical Fanconi's type DNA breakage disorder, and features of familial glucocorticoid deficiency (FGD). The NK cell deficiency probably accounts for the patients' recurrent viral illnesses. Molecular tests support a diagnosis of mosaic Fanconi's anaemia, but the patients do not present with any of the expected clinical features of the disorder. The symptomatic presentation of FGD was delayed in onset and may be a secondary phenotype. As all three phenotypes segregate together, the authors postulated that the NK cell deficiency, DNA repair disorder and FGD were caused by a single recessive genetic event.Methods: Single-nucleotide polymorphism homozygosity mapping and targeted next-generation sequencing of 10 patients and 16 unaffected relatives. Results: A locus for the syndrome was identified at 8p11.21-q11.22. Targeted resequencing of the candidate region revealed a homozygous mutation in MCM4/PRKDC in all 10 affected individuals. Consistent with the observed DNA breakage disorder, MCM4 and PRKDC are both involved in the ATM/ATR (ataxia-telangiectasia-mutated/ATM-Rad 3-related) DNA repair pathway, which is defective in patients with Fanconi's anaemia. Deficiency of PRKDC in mice has been shown to result in an abnormal NK cell physiology similar to that observed in these patients.Conclusion: Mutations in MCM4/PRKDC represent a novel cause of DNA breakage and NK cell deficiency. These findings suggest that clinicians should consider this disorder in patients with failure to thrive who develop pigmentation or who have recurrent infections.
Sponsorship
Health Research Board
Irish Research Council for Science, Engineering and Technology
Science Foundation Ireland
Other Sponsorship
National Children’s Research Centre, Our Lady’s Children’s Hospital Crumlin
Medical Research Charities Groups
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
BMJ Publishing Group
Journal
Journal of Medical Genetics
Volume
49
Issue
4
Start Page
242
End Page
245
Copyright (Published Version)
2012 BMJ
Subjects

Failure to thrive

DNA repair defect

Natural killer cell d...

Familial glucocortico...

MCM4

Travelers

DOI
10.1136/jmedgenet-2012-100803
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/ie/
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Casey_MCM4_2012.pdf

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431.93 KB

Format

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Checksum (MD5)

4860eb8fb65493271e034123911e782a

Owning collection
Biomolecular and Biomedical Science Research Collection

Item descriptive metadata is released under a CC-0 (public domain) license: https://creativecommons.org/public-domain/cc0/.
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