West Robert R, Bauer Thomas R, Tuschong Laura M, Embree Lisa J, Calvo Katherine R, Tillo Desiree, Davis Joie, Holland Steven M, Hickstein Dennis D
Immune Deficiency-Cellular Therapy Program, Center for Cancer Research, National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, MD.
Department of Laboratory Medicine, National Institutes of Health Clinical Center, Bethesda, MD.
Blood Adv. 2023 Oct 24;7(20):6351-6363. doi: 10.1182/bloodadvances.2023010458.
Mutations in the transcription factor GATA2 can cause MonoMAC syndrome, a GATA2 deficiency disease characterized by several findings, including disseminated nontuberculous mycobacterial infections, severe deficiencies of monocytes, natural killer cells, and B lymphocytes, and myelodysplastic syndrome. GATA2 mutations are found in ∼90% of patients with a GATA2 deficiency phenotype and are largely missense mutations in the conserved second zinc-finger domain. Mutations in an intron 5 regulatory enhancer element are also well described in GATA2 deficiency. Here, we present a multigeneration kindred with the clinical features of GATA2 deficiency but lacking an apparent GATA2 mutation. Whole genome sequencing revealed a unique adenine-to-thymine variant in the GATA2 -110 enhancer 116,855 bp upstream of the GATA2 ATG start site. The mutation creates a new E-box consensus in position with an existing GATA-box to generate a new hematopoietic regulatory composite element. The mutation segregates with the disease in several generations of the family. Cell type-specific allelic imbalance of GATA2 expression was observed in the bone marrow of a patient with higher expression from the mutant-linked allele. Allele-specific overexpression of GATA2 was observed in CRISPR/Cas9-modified HL-60 cells and in luciferase assays with the enhancer mutation. This study demonstrates overexpression of GATA2 resulting from a single nucleotide change in an upstream enhancer element in patients with MonoMAC syndrome. Patients in this study were enrolled in the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases clinical trial and the National Cancer Institute clinical trial (both trials were registered at www.clinicaltrials.gov as #NCT01905826 and #NCT01861106, respectively).
转录因子GATA2的突变可导致单倍体巨噬细胞综合征(MonoMAC综合征),这是一种GATA2缺陷疾病,其特征包括多种表现,如播散性非结核分枝杆菌感染、单核细胞、自然杀伤细胞和B淋巴细胞严重缺乏以及骨髓增生异常综合征。在约90%具有GATA2缺陷表型的患者中发现了GATA2突变,且大多为保守的第二个锌指结构域中的错义突变。GATA2缺陷中,内含子5调控增强子元件的突变也有详细描述。在此,我们报告了一个具有GATA2缺陷临床特征但未发现明显GATA2突变的多代家系。全基因组测序显示,在GATA2 ATG起始位点上游116,855 bp的GATA2 -110增强子中存在一个独特的腺嘌呤到胸腺嘧啶变异。该突变在与现有GATA框相对应的位置产生了一个新的E框共有序列,从而形成一个新的造血调控复合元件。该突变在家族的几代人中与疾病共分离。在一名患者的骨髓中观察到GATA2表达的细胞类型特异性等位基因失衡,突变相关等位基因的表达更高。在CRISPR/Cas9修饰的HL-60细胞以及具有增强子突变的荧光素酶测定中,观察到了GATA2的等位基因特异性过表达。本研究证明,MonoMAC综合征患者中上游增强子元件的单个核苷酸变化导致了GATA2的过表达。本研究中的患者参加了美国国立过敏与传染病研究所的临床试验和美国国立癌症研究所的临床试验(两项试验分别在www.clinicaltrials.gov上注册,注册号分别为#NCT01905826和#NCT01861106)。