Familial hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (familial HLH or FHL) is a potentially fatal autosomal recessive disorder. Our previous study demonstrated that UNC13D mutations (FHL3) account for ~90 % of FHL in Korea with recurrent splicing mutation c.754-1G>C (IVS9-1G>C). Notably, half of the FHL3 patients had a monoallelic mutation of UNC13D. Deep intronic mutations in UNC13D were recently reported in patients of European descent. In this study, we performed targeted mutation analyses for deep intronic mutations and investigated on the founder effect in FHL3 in Korean patients. The study patients were 72 children with HLH including those with FHL3 previously reported to have a monoallelic UNC13D mutation. All patients were recruited from the Korean Registry of Hemophagocytic Lymphohistiocytosis. In addition to conventional sequencing of FHL2-4, targeted tests for c.118-308C>T and large intronic rearrangement mutations of UNC13D were performed. Haplotype analysis was performed for founder effects using polymorphic markers in the FHL3 locus. FHL mutations were detected in 20 patients (28 %). Seventeen patients had UNC13D mutations (FHL3, 85 %) and three had PRF1 mutations (FHL2, 15 %). UNC13D:c.118-308C>T was detected in ten patients, accounting for 38 % of all mutant alleles of UNC13D, followed by c.754-1G>C (26 %). Haplotype analyses revealed significantly shared haplotypes in both c.118-308C>T and c.754-1G>C, indicating the presence of founder effects. The deep intronic mutation UNC13D:c.118-308C>T accounts for the majority of previously missing mutations and is the most frequent mutation in FHL3 in Korea. Founder effects of two recurrent intronic mutations of UNC13D explain the unusual predominance of FHL3 in Korea.
Familial hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (F-HLH or FHL) is a potentially fatal immune dysregulation syndrome with a heterogeneous genetic background. Most recently, STXBP2 has been identified as the causative gene of type 5 FHL (FHL5) with a worldwide distribution. In this study, we investigated the prevalence of FHL5 in Korea. About 50 Korean pediatric patients with HLH who lacked pathogenic mutations in PRF1, UNC13D, or in STX11 from the previous series of 72 patients with HLH were analyzed for STXBP2 mutations by conventional sequencing analyses. As a result, we found one patient with two novel mutations of STXBP2: c.184A>G and c.577A>C. c.184A>G (p.Asn62Asp) was located within a highly conserved region of the STXBP2 protein and predicted to be deleterious. c.577A>C in exon 7 resulted in incomplete splicing mutation with exon 7 skipping concurrent with exon 7-retained transcript with p.Lys193Gln substitution. The frequency of FHL5 was ~1% (1/72) in Korean pediatric patients with HLH. This is the first study on FHL5 in Korea, and the data from a nationwide patient cohort provide another piece of genetic profiles of FHL.
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