Abstract

Severe congenital neutropenia (SCN) is characterized by a near absence of neutrophils, rendering individuals with this disorder vulnerable to recurrent life-threatening infections. The majority of SCN cases arise because of germline mutations in the gene elastase, neutrophil-expressed (ELANE) encoding the neutrophil granule serine protease neutrophil elastase. Treatment with a high dose of granulocyte colony-stimulating factor increases neutrophil production and reduces infection risk. How ELANE mutations produce SCN remains unknown. The currently proposed mechanism is that ELANE mutations promote protein misfolding, resulting in endoplasmic reticulum stress and activation of the unfolded protein response (UPR), triggering death of neutrophil precursors and resulting in neutropenia. Here we studied the ELANE mutation p.G185R, often associated with greater clinical severity (e.g. decreased responsiveness to granulocyte colony-stimulating factor and increased leukemogenesis). Using an inducible expression system, we observed that this ELANE mutation diminishes enzymatic activity and granulocytic differentiation without significantly affecting cell proliferation, cell death, or UPR induction in murine myeloblast 32D and human promyelocytic NB4 cells. Impaired differentiation was associated with decreased expression of genes encoding critical hematopoietic transcription factors (Gfi1, Cebpd, Cebpe, and Spi1), cell surface proteins (Csf3r and Gr1), and neutrophil granule proteins (Mpo and Elane). Together, these findings challenge the currently prevailing model that SCN results from mutant ELANE, which triggers endoplasmic reticulum stress, UPR, and apoptosis.

Highlights

  • Severe congenital neutropenia (SCN) is characterized by a near absence of neutrophils, rendering individuals with this disorder vulnerable to recurrent life-threatening infections

  • Severe congenital neutropenia (SCN)3 is a condition of extremely low absolute numbers of circulating neutrophils (Ͻ500/␮l), which results in recurrent life-threatening infections [1]

  • We observed that mutant ELANE G185R is enzymatically inactive and that its localization is different compared with WT ELANE

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Summary

Introduction

Severe congenital neutropenia (SCN) is characterized by a near absence of neutrophils, rendering individuals with this disorder vulnerable to recurrent life-threatening infections. The currently proposed mechanism is that ELANE mutations promote protein misfolding, resulting in endoplasmic reticulum stress and activation of the unfolded protein response (UPR), triggering death of neutrophil precursors and resulting in neutropenia. Impaired differentiation was associated with decreased expression of genes encoding critical hematopoietic transcription factors (Gfi, Cebpd, Cebpe, and Spi1), cell surface proteins (Csf3r and Gr1), and neutrophil granule proteins (Mpo and Elane). Together, these findings challenge the currently prevailing model that SCN results from mutant ELANE, which triggers endoplasmic reticulum stress, UPR, and apoptosis. The block in terminal granulocytic differentiation may be attributed to aberrant transcription factor activity [12]

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