Abstract

Germline gain-of-function (GOF) mutations in the CARD11 gene lead to a rare primary immunodeficiency disease known as B cell expansion with NF-κB and T cell anergy (BENTA). Affected patients present with a polyclonal expansion of B cells, lymphadenopathy, and splenomegaly. Herein, we report a novel germline in-frame three base-pair deletion (c.1030_1032del, p.K344del) in the CARD11 gene in a patient with atypical BENTA, presenting with a recurrent fever and B cell lymphocytosis. This mutation was inherited from his mother, who is clinically asymptomatic and had a recurrent respiratory tract infection in her childhood. In vitro functional analysis demonstrated that this variant decreased the expression level of the CARD11 protein and activated the NF-κB signal pathway, leading to a higher expression of several NF-κB target gene transcripts in HCT116 cells transfected with mutant CARD11 (K344del-CARD11) as revealed by RNA sequencing analysis. To our knowledge, only 23 BENTA patients have been identified and carried seven distinct GOF mutations in CARD11. The clinical manifestations of patients are highly heterogeneous and there was no significant correlation between genotype and phenotype. In summary, we identified a novel in-frame three base-pair deletion that may be responsible for the pathogenesis of atypical BENTA in a Chinese family. Our study expands the mutational spectrum of the CARD11 gene and may be helpful in the understanding of diseases caused by CARD11 mutations and the clinical management of BENTA.

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