Immunopathology & Immunotherapy
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Immunopathology & Immunotherapy
Latest advances in immunopathology diagnosis and treatment
Curated by Alfredo Corell
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Personalized medicine against hereditary immunodeficiency

Personalized medicine against hereditary immunodeficiency | Immunopathology & Immunotherapy | Scoop.it
Researchers have found a method to repair the gene mutation causing agammaglobulinemia, an immunodeficiency disease that almost exclusively affects boys and in which the body lacks the ability to produce immunoglobulins (gamma globulin). The disease is characterized by recurring bacterial infections, mainly in the respiratory system, and persons who suffer from the illness currently need life-long gamma globulin treatment.
Alfredo Corell's insight:

X-linked agammaglobulinemia (XLA) is an inherited immunodeficiency that results from mutations within the gene encoding Bruton’s tyrosine kinase (BTK). Many XLA-associated mutations affect splicing of BTK pre-mRNA and severely impair B cell development. Here, we assessed the potential of antisense, splice-correcting oligonucleotides (SCOs) targeting mutated BTK transcripts for treating XLA. Both the SCO structural design and chemical properties were optimized using 2′-O-methyl, locked nucleic acid, or phosphorodiamidate morpholino backbones. In order to have access to an animal model of XLA, we engineered a transgenic mouse that harbors a BAC with an authentic, mutated, splice-defective human BTK gene. BTK transgenic mice were bred onto a Btk knockout background to avoid interference of the orthologous mouse protein. Using this model, we determined that BTK-specific SCOs are able to correct aberrantly spliced BTK in B lymphocytes, including pro–B cells. Correction of BTK mRNA restored expression of functional protein, as shown both by enhanced lymphocyte survival and reestablished BTK activation upon B cell receptor stimulation. Furthermore, SCO treatment corrected splicing and restored BTK expression in primary cells from patients with XLA. Together, our data demonstrate that SCOs can restore BTK function and that BTK-targeting SCOs have potential as personalized medicine in patients with XLA.


GO TO THE JOURNAL OF CLINICAL INVESTIGATION MANUSCRIPT:

http://www.jci.org/articles/view/76175

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Bruton's tyrosine kinase—an integral protein of B cell development that also has an essential role in the innate immune system

Bruton's tyrosine kinase—an integral protein of B cell development that also has an essential role in the innate immune system | Immunopathology & Immunotherapy | Scoop.it
  1. Gabriela López-Herrera*,1
  2. Alexander Vargas-Hernández,
  3. Maria Edith González-Serrano*
  4. Laura Berrón-Ruiz*,
  5. Juan Carlos Rodríguez-Alba
  6. Francisco Espinosa-Rosales* and
  7. Leopoldo Santos-Argumedo
Alfredo Corell's insight:

Btk is the protein affected in XLA, a disease identified as a B cell differentiation defect. Btk is crucial for B cell differentiation and activation, but its role in other cells is not fully understood. This review focuses on the function of Btk in monocytes, neutrophils, and platelets and the receptors and signaling cascades in such cells with which Btk is associated.

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