Abstract

To identify mechanisms of disease in a child born to consanguineous parents, who presented with Omenn syndrome (OS) and was found to carry a heterozygous RAG1 mutation in peripheral blood DNA. Mutation analysis was performed on whole blood and buccal swab DNA. Recombination activity of the mutant RAG1 protein and diversity of T cell repertoire were tested. Apparent heterozygosity for a novel, functionally null RAG1 mutation in peripheral blood DNA from a patient with OS was shown to be secondary to true somatic reversion. Analysis of T cell repertoire demonstrated expression of various TCRBV families, but an overall restricted pattern. This is the first case of true somatic reversion of a RAG1 mutation in a patient with OS. The reversion event likely occurred at a stage where only a limited pool of T cell progenitors capable of performing V(D)J recombination could be generated. This work emphasizes the importance of performing functional studies to investigate the significance of novel genetic variants, and to consider somatic reversion as a possible disease modifier in SCID.

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