Whole-exome-sequencing-based discovery of human FADD deficiency.

["Bolze, Alexandre", "Byun, Minji", "McDonald, David", "Morgan, Neil V", "Abhyankar, Avinash", "Premkumar, Lakshmanane", "Puel, Anne", "Bacon, Chris M", "Rieux-Laucat, Fr\u00e9d\u00e9ric", "Pang, Ki", "Britland, Alison", "Abel, Laurent", "Cant, Andrew", "Maher, Eamonn R", "Riedl, Stefan J", "Hambleton, Sophie", "Casanova, Jean-Laurent"]
American journal of human genetics 2010
Open on PubMed

Germline mutations in FASL and FAS impair Fas-dependent apoptosis and cause recessively or dominantly inherited autoimmune lymphoproliferative syndrome (ALPS). Patients with ALPS typically present with no other clinical phenotype. We investigated a large, consanguineous, multiplex kindred in which biological features of ALPS were found in the context of severe bacterial and viral disease, recurrent hepatopathy and encephalopathy, and cardiac malformations. By a combination of genome-wide linkage and whole-exome sequencing, we identified a homozygous missense mutation in FADD, encoding the Fas-associated death domain protein (FADD), in the patients. This FADD mutation decreases steady-state protein levels and impairs Fas-dependent apoptosis in vitro, accounting for biological ALPS phenotypes in vivo. It also impairs Fas-independent signaling pathways. The observed bacterial infections result partly from functional hyposplenism, and viral infections result from impaired interferon immunity. We describe here a complex clinical disorder, its genetic basis, and some of the key mechanisms underlying its pathogenesis. Our findings highlight the key role of FADD in Fas-dependent and Fas-independent signaling pathways in humans.