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Publication : A missense mutation in TFRC, encoding transferrin receptor 1, causes combined immunodeficiency.

First Author  Jabara HH Year  2016
Journal  Nat Genet Volume  48
Issue  1 Pages  74-8
PubMed ID  26642240 Mgi Jnum  J:231935
Mgi Id  MGI:5775517 Doi  10.1038/ng.3465
Citation  Jabara HH, et al. (2016) A missense mutation in TFRC, encoding transferrin receptor 1, causes combined immunodeficiency. Nat Genet 48(1):74-8
abstractText  Patients with a combined immunodeficiency characterized by normal numbers but impaired function of T and B cells had a homozygous p.Tyr20His substitution in transferrin receptor 1 (TfR1), encoded by TFRC. The substitution disrupts the TfR1 internalization motif, resulting in defective receptor endocytosis and markedly increased TfR1 expression on the cell surface. Iron citrate rescued the lymphocyte defects, and expression of wild-type but not mutant TfR1 rescued impaired transferrin uptake in patient-derived fibroblasts. Tfrc(Y20H/Y20H) mice recapitulated the immunological defects of patients. Despite the critical role of TfR1 in erythrocyte development and function, patients had only mild anemia and only slightly increased TfR1 expression in erythroid precursors. We show that STEAP3, a metalloreductase expressed in erythroblasts, associates with TfR1 and partially rescues transferrin uptake in patient-derived fibroblasts, suggesting that STEAP3 may provide an accessory TfR1 endocytosis signal that spares patients from severe anemia. These findings demonstrate the importance of TfR1 in adaptive immunity.
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