Heterozygous missense variant of the proteasome subunit β-type 9 causes neonatal-onset autoinflammation and immunodeficiency

Author:

Kanazawa NobuoORCID,Hemmi Hiroaki,Kinjo Noriko,Ohnishi HidenoriORCID,Hamazaki Jun,Mishima HiroyukiORCID,Kinoshita Akira,Mizushima Tsunehiro,Hamada Satoru,Hamada Kazuya,Kawamoto NorioORCID,Kadowaki Saori,Honda Yoshitaka,Izawa KazushiORCID,Nishikomori RyutaORCID,Tsumura Miyuki,Yamashita Yusuke,Tamura Shinobu,Orimo Takashi,Ozasa Toshiya,Kato TakashiORCID,Sasaki Izumi,Fukuda-Ohta Yuri,Wakaki-Nishiyama Naoko,Inaba YutakaORCID,Kunimoto Kayo,Okada SatoshiORCID,Taketani Takeshi,Nakanishi KoichiORCID,Murata ShigeoORCID,Yoshiura Koh-ichiroORCID,Kaisho TsuneyasuORCID

Abstract

AbstractImpaired proteasome activity due to genetic variants of certain subunits might lead to proteasome-associated autoinflammatory syndromes (PRAAS). Here we report a de novo heterozygous missense variant of the PSMB9 proteasome subunit gene in two unrelated Japanese infants resulting in amino acid substitution of the glycine (G) by aspartic acid (D) at position 156 of the encoded protein β1i. In addition to PRAAS-like manifestations, these individuals suffer from pulmonary hypertension and immunodeficiency, which are distinct from typical PRAAS symptoms. The missense variant results in impaired immunoproteasome maturation and activity, yet ubiquitin accumulation is hardly detectable in the patients. A mouse model of the heterozygous human genetic variant (Psmb9G156D/+) recapitulates the proteasome defects and the immunodeficiency phenotype of patients. Structurally, PSMB9 G156D interferes with the β-ring-βring interaction of the wild type protein that is necessary for 20S proteasome formation. We propose the term, proteasome-associated autoinflammatory syndrome with immunodeficiency (PRAAS-ID), to indicate a separate category of autoinflammatory diseases, similar to, but distinct from PRAAS, that describes the patients in this study.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry

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