Skip to main content
Premium Trial:

Request an Annual Quote

Rare, X-Linked Variants in DOCK11 Implicated in Handful of Patients

A team led by researchers at St. Anna Children's Cancer Research Institute in Vienna has identified rare, X-linked germline mutations in DOCK11 in a handful of patients with otherwise unexplained immune system and hematological symptoms. As they report in the New England Journal of Medicine, the researchers sequenced four male patients with similar presentations to uncover four hemizygous variants in the DOCK11 gene. DOCK11 is expressed largely in hematopoietic cells and, though it has a role in B cell development in mice, its role in people is mostly unknown. In a series of assays, the St. Anna's team found that while the DOCK11 gene variants they found affect B cell development, they also affect T cell development and lead to T cell overactivation, which can lead to organ damage. "The protein appears to play a role in keeping the activation of T cells within a certain range," first author Jana Block, a PhD student at St. Anna's and the CeMM Research Center for Molecular Medicine of the Austrian Academy of Sciences, says in a statement. Block and colleagues add that stem cell transplants or gene therapy could treat the disease, though more research is needed.

The Scan

Cystatin C Plays Role in Immunosuppression, Cancer Immunotherapy Failure, Study Finds

A study in Cell Genomics provides insight into how glucocorticoids can lead to cancer immunotherapy failure via cystatin C production.

Aging, Species Lifespan Gene Expression Signatures Overlap

An Osaka Metropolitan University team reports in Nucleic Acids Research that transcriptional signatures of aging and maximum lifespan have similarities.

Splicing Subgroup Provides Protocols for Evaluating Splicing Variant Data

The group presents their approach on how to apply evidence codes to splicing predictions and other data in the American Journal of Human Genetics.

Single-Cell Transcriptomic Atlas of Mouse Cochlea to Aid Treatment Development

Researchers in PNAS conducted single-cell and single-nuclear sequencing of about 120,000 cells at three key timepoints in cochlear development to generate a transcriptomic atlas.