Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0024312 (lymphopenia)
4,859 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A family including three children with DiGeorge syndrome is described. One child died in the neonatal period from cardiac anomalies accompanying complete DiGeorge syndrome. The two surviving siblings shared a common set of pharyngeal pouch anomalies and immunodeficiency consistent with partial DiGeorge syndrome, and other morphologic anomalies characteristic of the velocardiofacial syndrome with which familial DiGeorge syndrome is associated (reviewed in reference 1). Both had normal karyotypes. Both presented with recurrent otitis media and sinopulmonary infections, CD4+ T cell lymphopenia, and defective DCH skin test responses to recall T cell antigens. Both had low serum IgM levels and IgG4 levels at the lower limits of normal. Immunization with bacterial polysaccharides resulted in impaired IgG antibody responses to the same set of antigens (H. influenzae polyribophosphate and S. pneumoniae capsular serotypes 9N and 14), while responses to protein antigens were intact. Both siblings were treated successfully with intravenous gamma globulin. The pattern of selective antibody deficiency in these patients with familial DiGeorge syndrome suggests a heritable lesion in certain regulatory antipolysaccharide CD4+ T cell subpopulations.
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PMID:Selective polysaccharide antibody deficiency in familial DiGeorge syndrome. 152 80

Patients with chromosome 22q11.2 deletion syndrome (DiGeorge syndrome/velocardiofacial syndrome) typically exhibit thymic hypoplasia, conotruncal cardiac defects, and hypoparathyroidism. The immunodeficiency that results from the thymic hypoplasia has been extensively described and consists primarily of T-cell lymphopenia. A curious feature of the T-cell lymphopenia is that the age-related rate of decline of T-cell numbers is slower in patients than controls. This leads to T-cell numbers in adulthood that are minimally decreased compared with controls. This suggests that homeostatic mechanisms might be acting to preserve the peripheral blood T-cell numbers in patients. We characterized changes in CD4/CD45RA and CD4/CD45RO T-cell populations in patients and controls of various ages and determined T-cell recombination excision circles and telomere length within the CD4/CD45RA population. Patients had evidence of accelerated conversion of naive to memory cells and had evidence of more extensive replicative history within the CD4/CD45RA compartment compared with controls. Oligoclonal T-cell receptor (TCR) Vbeta families and missing Vbeta families were seen more often in patients than controls. These data are consistent with homeostatic proliferation of T cells in patients with limited T-cell production due to thymic hypoplasia.
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PMID:T-cell homeostasis in humans with thymic hypoplasia due to chromosome 22q11.2 deletion syndrome. 1452 74