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Başlık: Human osteoclast-poor osteopetrosis with hypogammaglobulinemia due to TNFRSF11A (RANK) mutations
Yazarlar: Guerrini, Matteo M.
Sobacchi, Cristina
Cassani, Barbara
Abinun, Mario
Pangrazio, Alessandra
Moratto, Daniele
Mazzolari, Evelina
Clayton-Smith, Jill
Orchard, Paul
Coxon, Fraser P.
Helfrich, Miep H.
Crocket, Julie C.
Mellis, David
Vellod, Ashok
Tezcan, İlhan
Notarangelo, Luigi D.
Rogers, Michael J.
Vezzoni, Paolo
Villa, Anna
Frattini, Annalisa
Uludağ Üniversitesi/Tıp Fakültesi/Çocuk Sağlığı ve Hastalıkları Anabilim Dalı/Çocuk İmmunoloji Bilim Dalı.
Kılıç, Sara Şebnem
AAH-1658-2021
34975059200
Anahtar kelimeler: Genetics & Heredity
Autosomal recessive osteopetrosis
Receptor activator differentiation
Duplication
Disease
TCIRG1
Cells
Yayın Tarihi: Tem-2008
Yayıncı: Cell Press
Atıf: Guerrini, M. M. vd. (2008). "Human osteoclast-poor osteopetrosis with hypogammaglobulinemia due to TNFRSF11A (RANK) mutations". American Journal of Human Genetics, 83(1), 64-76.
Özet: Autosomal-Recessive Osteopetrosis (ARO) comprises a heterogeneous group of bone diseases for which mutations in five genes are known as causative. Most ARO are classified as osteoclast-rich, but recently a subset of osteoclast-poor ARO has been recognized as due to a defect in TNESF11 (also called RANKL or TRANCE, coding for the RANKL protein), a master gene driving osteoclast differentiation along the RANKL-RANK axis. RANKL and RANK (coded for by the TNFRSF11A gene) also play a role in the immune system, which raises the possibility that defects in this pathway might cause osteopetrosis with immunodeficiency. From a large series of ARO patients we selected a Turkish consanguineous family with two siblings affected by ARO and hypogammaglobulinemia with no defects in known osteopetrosis genes. Sequencing of genes involved in the RANKL downstream pathway identified a homozygous mutation in the TNERSF11A gene in both siblings. Their monocytes failed to differentiate in vitro into osteoclasts upon exposure to M-CSF and RANKL, in keeping with an osteoclast-intrinsic defect. Immunological analysis showed that their hypogammaglobulinemia was associated with impairment in immunoglobulin-secreting B cells. Investigation of other patients revealed a defect in both TNFRSF11A alleles in six additional, unrelated families. Our results indicate that TNFRSF11A mutations can cause a clinical condition in which severe ARO is associated with an immunoglobulin-production defect.
URI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ajhg.2008.06.015
http://hdl.handle.net/11452/22406
ISSN: 0002-9297
1537-6605
Koleksiyonlarda Görünür:Scopus
Web of Science

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