A novel homozygous RHOH variant associated with T cell dysfunction and recurrent opportunistic infections

Author:

Zhou Jingyu1,Qian Mengqing1,Jiang Ning1,Wu Jing1,Feng Xiaoqian2,Yu Meiping3,Min Qing3,Xu Haoxin1,Yang Yixuan1,Yang Qingluan1,Zhou Feiran1,Shao Lingyun1,Zhu Haoxiang1,Yang Yun4,Wang Ji-Yang2,Ruan Qiaoling1,Zhang Wenhong1

Affiliation:

1. National Medical Center for Infectious Diseases, Huashan Hospital, Fudan University

2. Fudan University

3. Children’s Hospital of Fudan University, National Children’s Medical Center

4. the First People’s Hospital of Yunnan Province

Abstract

Abstract

RHOH, an atypical small GTPase predominantly expressed in hematopoietic cells, plays a vital role in immune function. A deficiency in RHOH has been linked to epidermodysplasia verruciformis, lung disease, Burkitt lymphoma and T cell defects. Here, we report a novel germline homozygous RHOH c.245G > A (p.Cys82Tyr) variant in a 21-year-old male suffering from recurrent, invasive, opportunistic infections affecting the lungs, eyes, and brain. His sister also succumbed to a lung infection during early adulthood. The patient exhibited a persistent decrease in CD4+ T, B, and NK cell counts, and hypoimmunoglobulinemia. Despite normal RHOH mRNA levels in his family, the patient’s T cell showed impaired activation upon in vitro TCR stimulation. In Jurkat T cells transduced with RHOHC82Y, a similar reduction in CD69 activation marker up-regulation was observed. However, ectopic expression of the C82Y variant did not exhibit a negative dominance over wild type RHOH. Furthermore, the C82Y variant showed reduced RHOH protein expression and impaired interaction with the TCR signaling molecule ZAP70. Together, these data suggest that the newly identified autosomal-recessive RHOH variant is associated with T cell dysfunction and recurrent opportunistic infections, functioning as a hypomorph by disrupting ZAP70-mediated TCR signaling.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

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