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Heterogeneity of Human Neutrophil CD177 Expression Results from CD177P1 Pseudogene Conversion

Most humans harbor both CD177(neg) and CD177(pos) neutrophils but 1–10% of people are CD177(null), placing them at risk for formation of anti-neutrophil antibodies that can cause transfusion-related acute lung injury and neonatal alloimmune neutropenia. By deep sequencing the CD177 locus, we catalog...

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Autores principales: Wu, Zuopeng, Liang, Rong, Ohnesorg, Thomas, Cho, Vicky, Lam, Wesley, Abhayaratna, Walter P., Gatenby, Paul A., Perera, Chandima, Zhang, Yafei, Whittle, Belinda, Sinclair, Andrew, Goodnow, Christopher C., Field, Matthew, Andrews, T. Daniel, Cook, Matthew C.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4882059/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27227454
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1006067
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author Wu, Zuopeng
Liang, Rong
Ohnesorg, Thomas
Cho, Vicky
Lam, Wesley
Abhayaratna, Walter P.
Gatenby, Paul A.
Perera, Chandima
Zhang, Yafei
Whittle, Belinda
Sinclair, Andrew
Goodnow, Christopher C.
Field, Matthew
Andrews, T. Daniel
Cook, Matthew C.
author_facet Wu, Zuopeng
Liang, Rong
Ohnesorg, Thomas
Cho, Vicky
Lam, Wesley
Abhayaratna, Walter P.
Gatenby, Paul A.
Perera, Chandima
Zhang, Yafei
Whittle, Belinda
Sinclair, Andrew
Goodnow, Christopher C.
Field, Matthew
Andrews, T. Daniel
Cook, Matthew C.
author_sort Wu, Zuopeng
collection PubMed
description Most humans harbor both CD177(neg) and CD177(pos) neutrophils but 1–10% of people are CD177(null), placing them at risk for formation of anti-neutrophil antibodies that can cause transfusion-related acute lung injury and neonatal alloimmune neutropenia. By deep sequencing the CD177 locus, we catalogued CD177 single nucleotide variants and identified a novel stop codon in CD177(null) individuals arising from a single base substitution in exon 7. This is not a mutation in CD177 itself, rather the CD177(null) phenotype arises when exon 7 of CD177 is supplied entirely by the CD177 pseudogene (CD177P1), which appears to have resulted from allelic gene conversion. In CD177 expressing individuals the CD177 locus contains both CD177P1 and CD177 sequences. The proportion of CD177(hi) neutrophils in the blood is a heritable trait. Abundance of CD177(hi) neutrophils correlates with homozygosity for CD177 reference allele, while heterozygosity for ectopic CD177P1 gene conversion correlates with increased CD177(neg) neutrophils, in which both CD177P1 partially incorporated allele and paired intact CD177 allele are transcribed. Human neutrophil heterogeneity for CD177 expression arises by ectopic allelic conversion. Resolution of the genetic basis of CD177(null) phenotype identifies a method for screening for individuals at risk of CD177 isoimmunisation.
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spelling pubmed-48820592016-06-10 Heterogeneity of Human Neutrophil CD177 Expression Results from CD177P1 Pseudogene Conversion Wu, Zuopeng Liang, Rong Ohnesorg, Thomas Cho, Vicky Lam, Wesley Abhayaratna, Walter P. Gatenby, Paul A. Perera, Chandima Zhang, Yafei Whittle, Belinda Sinclair, Andrew Goodnow, Christopher C. Field, Matthew Andrews, T. Daniel Cook, Matthew C. PLoS Genet Research Article Most humans harbor both CD177(neg) and CD177(pos) neutrophils but 1–10% of people are CD177(null), placing them at risk for formation of anti-neutrophil antibodies that can cause transfusion-related acute lung injury and neonatal alloimmune neutropenia. By deep sequencing the CD177 locus, we catalogued CD177 single nucleotide variants and identified a novel stop codon in CD177(null) individuals arising from a single base substitution in exon 7. This is not a mutation in CD177 itself, rather the CD177(null) phenotype arises when exon 7 of CD177 is supplied entirely by the CD177 pseudogene (CD177P1), which appears to have resulted from allelic gene conversion. In CD177 expressing individuals the CD177 locus contains both CD177P1 and CD177 sequences. The proportion of CD177(hi) neutrophils in the blood is a heritable trait. Abundance of CD177(hi) neutrophils correlates with homozygosity for CD177 reference allele, while heterozygosity for ectopic CD177P1 gene conversion correlates with increased CD177(neg) neutrophils, in which both CD177P1 partially incorporated allele and paired intact CD177 allele are transcribed. Human neutrophil heterogeneity for CD177 expression arises by ectopic allelic conversion. Resolution of the genetic basis of CD177(null) phenotype identifies a method for screening for individuals at risk of CD177 isoimmunisation. Public Library of Science 2016-05-26 /pmc/articles/PMC4882059/ /pubmed/27227454 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1006067 Text en © 2016 Wu et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Wu, Zuopeng
Liang, Rong
Ohnesorg, Thomas
Cho, Vicky
Lam, Wesley
Abhayaratna, Walter P.
Gatenby, Paul A.
Perera, Chandima
Zhang, Yafei
Whittle, Belinda
Sinclair, Andrew
Goodnow, Christopher C.
Field, Matthew
Andrews, T. Daniel
Cook, Matthew C.
Heterogeneity of Human Neutrophil CD177 Expression Results from CD177P1 Pseudogene Conversion
title Heterogeneity of Human Neutrophil CD177 Expression Results from CD177P1 Pseudogene Conversion
title_full Heterogeneity of Human Neutrophil CD177 Expression Results from CD177P1 Pseudogene Conversion
title_fullStr Heterogeneity of Human Neutrophil CD177 Expression Results from CD177P1 Pseudogene Conversion
title_full_unstemmed Heterogeneity of Human Neutrophil CD177 Expression Results from CD177P1 Pseudogene Conversion
title_short Heterogeneity of Human Neutrophil CD177 Expression Results from CD177P1 Pseudogene Conversion
title_sort heterogeneity of human neutrophil cd177 expression results from cd177p1 pseudogene conversion
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4882059/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/27227454
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pgen.1006067
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