The actin regulator coronin 1A is mutant in a thymic egress-deficient mouse strain and in a patient with severe combined immunodeficiency

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

Authors

Shiow, Lawrence R
Roadcap, David W
Paris, Kenneth
Watson, Susan R
Grigorova, Irina L
Lebet, Tonya
An, Jinping
Xu, Ying
Jenne, Craig N
Foger, Niko

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Nature Publishing Group

Abstract

Mice carrying the recessive locus for peripheral T cell deficiency (Ptcd) have a block in thymic egress, but the mechanism responsible is undefined. Here we found that Ptcd T cells had an intrinsic migration defect, impaired lymphoid tissue trafficking and irregularly shaped protrusions. Characterization of the Ptcd locus showed a point substitution of lysine for glutamic acid at position 26 in the actin regulator coronin 1A that enhanced its inhibition of the actin regulator Arp2/3 and resulted in its mislocalization from the leading edge of migrating T cells. The discovery of another coronin 1A mutant during an N-ethyl-N-nitrosourea-mutagenesis screen for T cell-lymphopenic mice prompted us to evaluate a T cell-deficient, B cell-sufficient and natural killer cell-sufficient patient with severe combined immunodeficiency, whom we found had mutations in both CORO1A alleles. Our findings establish a function for coronin 1A in T cell egress, identify a surface of coronin involved in Arp2/3 regulation and demonstrate that actin regulation is a biological process defective in human and mouse severe combined immunodeficiency.

Description

Citation

Source

Nature Immunology

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until

2037-12-31