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Published in: Journal of Clinical Immunology 2/2015

Open Access 01-02-2015 | Original Research

Combined Immunodeficiency Due to MALT1 Mutations, Treated by Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation

Authors: Divya Punwani, Haopeng Wang, Alice Y. Chan, Morton J. Cowan, Jacob Mallott, Uma Sunderam, Marianne Mollenauer, Rajgopal Srinivasan, Steven E. Brenner, Arend Mulder, Frans H. J. Claas, Arthur Weiss, Jennifer M. Puck

Published in: Journal of Clinical Immunology | Issue 2/2015

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Abstract

Purpose

A male infant developed generalized rash, intestinal inflammation and severe infections including persistent cytomegalovirus. Family history was negative, T cell receptor excision circles were normal, and engraftment of maternal cells was absent. No defects were found in multiple genes associated with severe combined immunodeficiency. A 9/10 HLA matched unrelated hematopoietic cell transplant (HCT) led to mixed chimerism with clinical resolution. We sought an underlying cause for this patient’s immune deficiency and dysregulation.

Methods

Clinical and laboratory features were reviewed. Whole exome sequencing and analysis of genomic DNA from the patient, parents and 2 unaffected siblings was performed, revealing 2 MALT1 variants. With a host-specific HLA-C antibody, we assessed MALT1 expression and function in the patient’s post-HCT autologous and donor lymphocytes. Wild type MALT1 cDNA was added to transformed autologous patient B cells to assess functional correction.

Results

The patient had compound heterozygous DNA variants affecting exon 10 of MALT1 (isoform a, NM_006785.3), a maternally inherited splice acceptor c.1019-2A > G, and a de novo deletion of c.1059C leading to a frameshift and premature termination. Autologous lymphocytes failed to express MALT1 and lacked NF-κB signaling dependent upon the CARMA1, BCL-10 and MALT1 signalosome. Transduction with wild type MALT1 cDNA corrected the observed defects.

Conclusions

Our nonconsanguineous patient with early onset profound combined immunodeficiency and immune dysregulation due to compound heterozygous MALT1 mutations extends the clinical and immunologic phenotype reported in 2 prior families. Clinical cure was achieved with mixed chimerism after nonmyeloablative conditioning and HCT.
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Metadata
Title
Combined Immunodeficiency Due to MALT1 Mutations, Treated by Hematopoietic Cell Transplantation
Authors
Divya Punwani
Haopeng Wang
Alice Y. Chan
Morton J. Cowan
Jacob Mallott
Uma Sunderam
Marianne Mollenauer
Rajgopal Srinivasan
Steven E. Brenner
Arend Mulder
Frans H. J. Claas
Arthur Weiss
Jennifer M. Puck
Publication date
01-02-2015
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Journal of Clinical Immunology / Issue 2/2015
Print ISSN: 0271-9142
Electronic ISSN: 1573-2592
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10875-014-0125-1

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