Dominant negative mutation of the hematopoietic-specific Rho GTPase, Rac2, is associated with a human phagocyte immunodeficiency

D. A. Williams, W. Tao, F. Yang, C. Kim, Y. Gu, P. Mansfield, J. E. Levine, B. Petryniak, C. W. Derrow, C. Harris, B. Jia, Y. Zheng, D. R. Ambruso, J. B. Lowe, S. J. Atkinson, M. C. Dinauer, L. Boxer

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297 Scopus citations

Abstract

Rho GTPases control a variety of cellular processes, including actin polymerization, integrin complex formation, cell adhesion, gene transcription, cell cycle progression, and cell proliferation. A patient is described who has recurrent infections and defective neutrophil cellular functions similar to those found in Rac2-deficient mice. Molecular methods were used to clone the expressed Rac2 cDNA from this patient, and a single base pair change (G→A at nucleotide 169) in the coding sequence was identified. This resuits in an asparagine for aspartic acid mutation at amino acid 57 (D57N), a residue that is involved in nucleotide binding and is conserved in all mammalian Rho GTPases. The cloned cDNA was then introduced into normal bone marrow cells through retrovirus vectors, and neutrophils expressing this mutant exhibited decreased cell movement and production of superoxide in response to fMLP. The expressed recombinant protein was also analyzed biochemically and exhibited defective binding to GTP. Functional studies demonstrated that the D57N mutant behaves in a dominant-negative fashion at the cellular level. The syndrome of Rac2 dysfunction represents a human condition associated with mutation of a Rho GTPase and is another example of human disease associated with abnormalities of small G protein signaling pathways. (C) 2000 by The American Society of Hematology.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1646-1654
Number of pages9
JournalBlood
Volume96
Issue number5
StatePublished - Sep 1 2000

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