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Lymphland International Lymphedema Online
03 November 2009 - New Genetic Cause Of A Fatal Immune Disorder

Familial hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (FHL) is an inherited, fatal, immune disorder characterized by
uncontrolled activation of immune cells known as lymphocytes and macrophages. Disease-causing mutations
have been identified in several genes that generate proteins involved in lymphocyte-mediated cell death,
including syntaxin-11. Now, Geneviève de Saint Basile and colleagues, at INSERM U768, France, have
added a new gene to this list by determining that two distinct mutations in the gene that generates
syntaxin-binding protein 2 (Munc18-2; also known as STXBP2) cause disease in a subset of patients with
FHL; this form of the disease was then termed 'FHL5'.

Mechanistically, the two distinct STXBP2 mutations led to substantially decreased STXBP2 protein in
patient lymphoblasts and impaired release of death-inducing molecules from immune cells known as NK
cells. Further analysis indicated that the predominant protein to which STXBP2 binds in lymphocytes is
syntaxin-11. The authors therefore conclude that STXBP2 binds syntaxin-11, thereby controlling a late step
of the secretory pathway that releases death-inducing molecules; in patients with FHL5, the STXBP2
protein deficiency means this process cannot occur efficiently.

TITLE: Munc18-2 deficiency causes familial hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis type 5 and impairs
cytotoxic granule exocytosis in patient NK cells
http://www.jci.org/articles/view/40732?key=HIH915i5gkk549w2m55m

Source: Karen Honey
Journal of Clinical Investigation