Loss-of-function mutations in TNFAIP3 leading to A20 haploinsufficiency cause an early-onset autoinflammatory disease
Date
2016Author
CHEN, Celeste
DEMIRKAYA, Erkan
TAKEUCHI, Masaki
TSAI, Wanxia Li
YU, Xiaomin
OUYANG, Claudia
CHIN, David T.
ZAAL, Kristien
CHANDRASEKHARAPPA, Settara C.
KASTNER, Daniel L.
AKSENTIJEVICH, Ivona
Guel, Ahmet
HANSON, Eric P.
YU, Zhen
MULLIKIN, James C.
HASNI, Sarfaraz A.
WERTZ, Ingrid E.
OMBRELLO, Amanda K.
STONE, Deborah L.
HOFFMANN, Patrycja
JONES, Anne
BARHAM, Beverly K.
Leavis, Helen L.
van Royen-Kerkof, Annet
SIBLEY, Cailin
Batu, Ezgi D.
SIEGEL, Richard M.
BOEHM, Manfred
MILNER, Joshua D.
Ozen, Seza
GADINA, Massimo
CHAE, JaeJin
Laxer, Ronald M.
WANG, Hongying
LYONS, Jonathan J.
STOFFELS, Monique
PARK, Yong Hwan
ZHANG, Yuan
YANG, Dan
ZHOU, Qing
SCHWARTZ, Daniella M.
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Show full item recordAbstract
Systemic autoinflammatory diseases are driven by abnormal activation of innate immunity(1). Herein we describe a new disease caused by high-penetrance heterozygous germline mutations in TNFAIP3, which encodes the NF-kappa B regulatory protein A20, in six unrelated families with early-onset systemic inflammation. The disorder resembles Behcet's disease, which is typically considered a polygenic disorder with onset in early adulthood(2). A20 is a potent inhibitor of the NF-kappa B signaling pathway(3). Mutant, truncated A20 proteins are likely to act through haploinsufficiency because they do not exert a dominant-negative effect in overexpression experiments. Patient-derived cells show increased degradation of I kappa B alpha and nuclear translocation of the NF-kappa B p65 subunit together with increased expression of NF-kappa B-mediated proinflammatory cytokines. A20 restricts NF-kappa B signals via its deubiquitinase activity. In cells expressing mutant A20 protein, there is defective removal of Lys63-linked ubiquitin from TRAF6, NEMO and RIP1 after stimulation with tumor necrosis factor (TNF). NF-kappa B-dependent proinflammatory cytokines are potential therapeutic targets for the patients with this disease.
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