Leonard W J
Laboratory of Molecular Immunology, National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute, National Institutes of Health, Bethesda, Maryland 20892-1674, USA.
Annu Rev Med. 1996;47:229-39. doi: 10.1146/annurev.med.47.1.229.
X-linked severe combined immunodeficiency (XSCID) is an inherited disease characterized by profoundly diminished cell-mediated and humoral immunity. XSCID was found to result from mutations in the interleukin-2 (IL-2) receptor gamma chain. Knowledge of the genetic defect has important implications for prenatal and postnatal diagnosis, carrier female identification, and the possibility of gene therapy. The fact that the phenotype and clinical manifestations in XSCID are more severe than the abnormalities found in humans or mice deficient in IL-2 led to the speculation and subsequent confirmation that the IL-2 receptor is not the only receptor to contain the gamma chain. Instead, the gamma chain is also a component of the receptors for IL-4, IL-7, IL-9, and IL-15 and is now denoted as the common cytokine receptor gamma chain, gamma c. The role of gamma c in signaling and lymphoid development and the implications of a shared receptor component are discussed.
X连锁重症联合免疫缺陷病(XSCID)是一种遗传性疾病,其特征是细胞介导免疫和体液免疫严重受损。XSCID被发现是由白细胞介素-2(IL-2)受体γ链的突变引起的。对这种基因缺陷的了解对于产前和产后诊断、携带者女性的识别以及基因治疗的可能性具有重要意义。XSCID的表型和临床表现比IL-2缺陷的人类或小鼠中发现的异常更为严重,这一事实导致了这样的推测,随后得到证实,即IL-2受体不是唯一含有γ链的受体。相反,γ链也是IL-4、IL-7、IL-9和IL-15受体的一个组成部分,现在被称为共同细胞因子受体γ链,γc。本文讨论了γc在信号传导和淋巴细胞发育中的作用以及共享受体成分的意义。