Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:Q00604 (X-linked)
16,883 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The molecular basis for three well-defined X-linked diseases has recently been identified. In X-linked agammaglobulinemia, the gene encoding a novel cytoplasmic tyrosine kinase (btk) expressed by B cells is defective. This B-cell-specific kinase belongs to a new subfamily of tyrosine kinases. The molecular defect in X-linked hyper IgM affects the gene encoding the CD40 ligand (CD40L, gp39) on T cells. This protein binds to its natural receptor, CD40, expressed constitutively by B cells. The ligand-receptor interaction initiates B-cell proliferation and isotype switching. The molecular defect in X-linked severe combined immunodeficiency disease has been assigned to the gene encoding the gamma chain of the interleukin-2 receptor (IL-2R gamma), which is constitutively expressed by T cells and is involved in the formation of high and intermediate affinity IL-2R complexes. IL-2R-gamma is responsible for the failure of X-linked severe combined immunodeficiency disease T and B lymphocytes to respond to IL-2-dependent signals.
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PMID:Advances in X-linked immunodeficiency diseases. 790 59

Hyper-IgM syndrome is a rare immunodeficiency characterized by low or absent IgG, IgA, and IgE with normal or elevated levels of IgM. It can occur as an acquired or familial disorder with either X-linked or autosomal modes of inheritance. The X-linked form (HIGM1) is a result of mutations in the CD40 ligand (CD40L) gene, but the defect in non-X-linked forms of the disease (HIM) has not been determined. We show here that CD40L expression on activated T cells from non-X-linked patients can be detected by CD40Fc, 5c8 Mab, and anti-TRAP, whereas activated T cells from HIGM1 patients either had no detectable CD40L (Type I), or stained with anti-TRAP but not CD40Fc or 5c8 (Type II). Activated T cells from obligate carriers varied from low to normal expression of CD40L. B cells from HIGM1 and non-X-linked HIM patients proliferated in response to CD40L. Costimulation of B cells from HIGM1, from sporadic HIM, or from non-X-linked HIM patients with CD40L plus IL-2 resulted in some IgM production, but no significant IgG or IgA. Costimulation with CD40L plus IL-10 resulted in significant IgG and/or IgA secretion by B cells from some HIGM1 patients, but consistently failed to stimulate IgG or IgA secretion by B cells from non-X-linked patients. In addition, costimulation with CD40L and IL-4 failed to induce IgE secretion by B cells from one non-X-linked HIM patient, and induced a weak response in another. These results suggest that patients with non-X-linked forms of HIM may have an intrinsic B cell defect preventing heavy chain switching, which is not related to expression of CD40L.
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PMID:CD40 ligand (CD40L) expression and B cell function in agammaglobulinemia with normal or elevated levels of IgM (HIM). Comparison of X-linked, autosomal recessive, and non-X-linked forms of the disease, and obligate carriers. 791 70

We describe two siblings with X-linked hyper-IgM immunodeficiency. One patient developed disseminated cryptococcosis. Co-culture of this patient's T cells with normal B cells suppressed IgG and IgA production. The CD40 ligand gene of one patient was examined and contained a nonsense mutation at nucleotide 475. CD40 ligand is a membrane protein which is expressed on activated T cells and induces B-cell proliferation. These results suggest that there is a defect in T- and B-cell interactions in this immunodeficiency syndrome. It is also possible that patients with this syndrome are predisposed to cryptococcal infections.
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PMID:Hyper-IgM immunodeficiency with disseminated cryptococcosis. 794 15

The induction of immunoglobulin E (IgE) switching in B cells requires at least two signals. The first is given by either of the soluble lymphokines interleukin 4 (IL-4) or IL-13, whereas the second is contact dependent. It has been widely reported that a second signal can be provided by the CD40 ligand (CD40L) expressed on the surface of T cells, mast cells, and basophils. A defect in the CD40L has been shown recently to be responsible for the lack of IgE, IgA, and IgG, characteristic of the childhood X-linked immunodeficiency, hyper IgM syndrome (HIGM1). IgE can however be detected in the serum of some HIGM1 patients. In this study, we isolated T cell clones and lines using phytohemagglutinin (PHA) and allergen, respectively, from the peripheral blood of one such patient who expressed a truncated form of CD40L, and investigated their ability to induce IgE switching in highly purified, normal tonsillar B cells in vitro. Unexpectedly, 4 of 12 PHA clones tested induced contact-dependent IgE synthesis in the presence of exogenous IL-4. These clones were also shown to strongly upregulated IL-4-induced germline epsilon RNA and formed dense aggregates with B cells. Of the four helper clones, three were CD8+, of which two were characteristic of the T helper cell 2 (Th2) subtype. Two allergen-specific HIGM1 T cell lines, both of the Th0 subtype, could also drive IgE synthesis when prestimulated using specific allergen. All clones and lines were negative for surface expression of CD40L, and the mutated form of CD40L was confirmed for a representative clone by RNase protection assay and sequencing. The IgE helper activity could not be attributed to membrane tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) although it was strongly expressed on activated clones, and the addition of neutralizing anti-TNF-alpha antibody did not abrogate IgE synthesis. These results therefore suggest the involvement of T cell surface molecules other than CD40L in the induction of IgE synthesis, and that these molecules may also be implicated in other aspects of T-B cell interactions.
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PMID:T cell clones from an X-linked hyper-immunoglobulin (IgM) patient induce IgE synthesis in vitro despite expression of nonfunctional CD40 ligand. 796 60

Patients with X-linked Ig deficiency with normal or elevated IgM (HIGMX-1) fail to switch from IgM/IgD to other Ig isotypes. Interaction between the B cell antigen CD40 and the CD40 ligand expressed on activated T cells is critical for T cell driven isotype switching. We have reported that T lymphocytes from three unrelated male patients with HIGMX-1 failed to express CD40 ligand on their surface, but the mRNA for CD40 ligand was of an apparently normal size and level. Analysis of CD40 ligand cDNA from two of the patients revealed deletions that alter the reading frame. Patient 1 displayed two mutations: a C-->A transversion at nucleotide 590 and the deletion of an adjacent C nucleotide. The second patient had a 58 bp deletion from nucleotides 289-346. Furthermore, neither patient expressed a protein product detectable by the CD40L mAb, 5c8.
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PMID:Deletions in the ligand for CD40 in X-linked immunoglobulin deficiency with normal or elevated IgM (HIGMX-1). 810 73

The tendency of isolated germinal center (GC) B cells to undergo apoptosis was suppressed by recombinant cell-bound CD40 ligand (CD40L): after 2 days at 37 degrees C, > 80% of cells remained viable in the presence of CD40L as compared to < 1% in control cultures. CD40L sustained a high rate of DNA synthesis in GC cells and was more effective than monoclonal antibody to CD40 in this regard. Group I Burkitt lymphoma (BL) cell lines induced to undergo apoptosis with anti-immunoglobulin or calcium ionophore were also protected by CD40L. In BL cells, this route of rescue was not accompanied by induction of Bc1-2 protein, the expression of which has been linked to hemopoietic cell survival. Bc1-2 was induced in GC cells responding to CD40L, but its appearance was a relatively late event not reaching significant levels over controls until day 2 of culture. Thus induction of Bc1-2 appears to be secondary to the survival signal imparted by CD40L. These findings are discussed in relation to a potential role for CD40L in supporting B cell tumors in vivo and the discovery that the molecular defect in the X-linked Hyper-IgM syndrome is targeted to the CD40L gene.
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PMID:Suppression of apoptosis in normal and neoplastic human B lymphocytes by CD40 ligand is independent of Bc1-2 induction. 810 50

Within a short time interval the specific gene defects causing three X-linked human immunodeficiencies, agammaglobulinemia (XLA), hyper-IgM syndrome (HIGM), and severe combined immunodeficiency (XSCID), have been identified. These represent the first human disease phenotypes associated with each of three gene families already recognized to be important in lymphocyte development and signaling: XLA is caused by mutations of a B cell-specific intracellular tyrosine kinase; HIGM, by mutations in the TNF-related CD40 ligand, through which T cells deliver helper signals by direct contact with B cell CD40; and XSCID, by mutations in the gamma chain of the lymphocyte receptor for IL-2. Each patient mutation analyzed to date has been unique, representing both a challenge for genetic diagnosis and management and an important resource for dissecting molecular domains and understanding the physiologic function of the gene products.
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PMID:Molecular and genetic basis of X-linked immunodeficiency disorders. 819 17

The X-linked form of hyper-IgM syndrome (HIGM1) is a rare disorder characterized by the inability of B cells to undergo isotype switch by a deficiency of CD40 ligand (CD40L) on activated T lymphocytes. The patients suffer from recurrent infections not only due to a lack of B lymphocyte activation but also due to defect of T lymphocyte functions. In addition, neutropenia is frequently accompanied by these symptoms. A patient with HIGM1, we experienced, suffered from recurrent infections and neutropenia. But he had a normal number of hematopoietic stem cell by the in vitro colony forming assay. CD34+ myeloid stem cell has been known to express CD40. We speculated by these facts that myeloid cell numbers are regulated by CD40-CD40L interaction.
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PMID:[Neutropenia in patient with X-linked hyper-IgM syndrome]. 853 35

Mutations in the gene for CD40 ligand are responsible for the X-linked form of hyper IgM syndrome. However, no clinical or laboratory findings that reliably distinguish X-linked disease from other forms of hyper IgM syndrome have been reported, nor are there tests available that can be used to confidently provide carrier detection. To identify efficiently mutations in the gene for CD40 ligand, eight pairs of PCR primers that could be used to screen genomic DNA by single strand conformation polymorphism (SSCP) were designed. 11 different mutations were found in DNA from all 13 patients whose activated T cells failed to bind a recombinant CD40 construct. The exact nature of four of these mutations, a deletion and three splice defects, could not be determined by cDNA sequencing. In addition, SSCP analysis permitted rapid carrier detection in two families in whom the source of the mutation was most likely a male with gonadal chimerism who passed the disorder on to some but not all of his daughters. These studies document the utility of SSCP analysis for both mutation detection and carrier detection in X-linked hyper IgM syndrome.
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PMID:A single strand conformation polymorphism study of CD40 ligand. Efficient mutation analysis and carrier detection for X-linked hyper IgM syndrome. 855 Aug 33

Ligation of CD40 on B cells is a co-stimulatory signal for proliferation, antibody secretion, heavy chain switching and rescue from apoptosis after somatic mutation in the germinal centre. The importance of these manifold responses to CD40 activation for humoral immunity is exemplified by the inability of boys with X-linked hyper IgM syndrome to make IgG, IgE or IgA due to a mutation in in the gene coding for CD40 ligand (CD40L). In the present study, we have investigated the effect of CD40 ligation on specific antibody production by human B cells to influenza virus. The antibody response was T cell dependent and specific for the strain of influenza virus used as antigen. Addition of either CD40 mAb or recombinant trimeric CD40L profoundly inhibited specific antibody production. Antibody production by unseparated tonsillar mononuclear cells and by T-depleted B cells stimulated with antigen in the presence of T cell replacing factor were equally inhibited with CD40 antibody showing that the effect was due to ligation of CD40 on B cells rather than blocking of T cell help. The specific antibody detected in these experiments was mostly IgG with little or no IgM and was obtained from surface IgM B cells consistent with activation of a secondary (memory) response. Co-stimulation of tonsillar B cells with CD40 antibody and anti-IgG induced proliferation of IgG+ B cells. These results suggest that CD40 ligation can inhibit specific antibody responses and stimulate proliferation in the same IgG+ (memory) B cell subpopulation. Addition of CD40 antibody during the first 24-48 h of the response was required for inhibition, suggesting that the effect was on early B cell activation and/or proliferation required for antibody production. There was no correlation, however, between the ability of CD40 mAb to stimulate proliferation and inhibit antibody production. We suggest that early activation of CD40 in the specific antibody response inhibits the formation of plasma cells and promotes instead the generation of memory cells.
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PMID:CD40 cross-linking inhibits specific antibody production by human B cells. 858 79


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