Molecular quality control machinery contributes to the leukocyte NADPH oxidase deficiency in chronic granulomatous disease
Journal
Biochimica et Biophysica Acta - Molecular Basis of Disease
Journal Volume
1586
Journal Issue
3
Pages
275-286
Date Issued
2002
Author(s)
Lin S.-J.
Huang Y.-F.
Chen J.-Y.
Heyworth P.G.
Noack D.
Wang J.-Y.
Lin C.-Y.
Yang C.-M.
Liu C.-C.
Shieh C.-C.
Abstract
Chronic granulomatous disease (CGD) is an inherited immunodeficiency disease caused by defects in leukocyte NADPH oxidase. Various inherited defects in one of the membrane-bound components of NADPH oxidase, gp91-phox, cause X-linked (X91) CGD. Analysis of three patients with X91 CGD revealed that different mechanisms of molecular quality control lead to the common phenotype of absence of mature membrane-bound NADPH oxidase complex in leukocytes. In the first patient, aberrant intron splicing created a premature stop codon. However, the mutant mRNA was degraded prematurely, which prevented the production of truncated protein. In the second patient, a frameshift mutation with the potential to generate a gp91-phox polypeptide, with an aberrant and elongated C-terminus, led to barely detectable levels of gp91-phox, even though the reported functional domains of the protein appeared unaffected. In the third patient, a point mutation created a single amino acid change in the predicted FAD-binding site of gp91-phox. Although gp91-phox was detectable with Western blotting, no cytochrome b558 was expressed on the cell surface. These analyses showed that molecular quality control machinery plays an important role in the pathogenesis of CGD, not only in the X910 but also in the X91- form of this X-linked disease. ? 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.
Subjects
Chaperon; Immunodeficiency; Phagocyte; Respiratory burst
SDGs
Other Subjects
antibiotic agent; cell surface protein; flavine adenine nucleotide; genomic DNA; messenger RNA; polypeptide; reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate oxidase; amino acid substitution; article; binding site; carboxy terminal sequence; case report; cell surface; clinical feature; flow cytometry; frameshift mutation; granulomatosis; human; infant; intron; leukocyte; male; molecular dynamics; pathogenesis; phenotype; point mutation; preschool child; priority journal; protein domain; protein expression; protein synthesis; reverse transcription polymerase chain reaction; RNA degradation; RNA splicing; stop codon; Western blotting; Cell Membrane; Cell Nucleus; Cytochrome b Group; Endoplasmic Reticulum; Granulomatous Disease, Chronic; Humans; Infant; Intracellular Membranes; Leukocytes; Male; Membrane Glycoproteins; Mutation; NADPH Oxidase; Point Mutation; Quality Control; RNA, Messenger
Type
journal article