Publications by authors named "Agustin A Gil Silva"

IKAROS, encoded by IKZF1, is a six zinc-finger (ZF) transcription factor integral to lymphocyte development and function. IKZF1 mutations affecting DNA-binding (ZF1-4) and dimerization (ZF5-6) have been extensively reported and result in human disease. Herein, we investigated IKZF1 mutations affecting protein stability.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Background: Heterozygous immunoproteasome 20 S subunit beta 10 (PSMB10) mutations can cause severe combined immunodeficiency and Omenn syndrome. Hematopoietic stem cell transplantation in these patients is associated with severe complications and poor immune reconstitution, often resulting in death.

Objective: We sought to perform immunologic and molecular characterization of an infant with a PSMB10 heterozygous variant.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The telomere sequence, TTAGGG, is conserved across all vertebrates and plays an essential role in suppressing the DNA damage response by binding a set of proteins termed shelterin. Changes in the telomere sequence impair shelterin binding, initiate a DNA damage response, and are toxic to cells. Here we identify a family with a variant in the telomere template sequence of telomerase, the enzyme responsible for telomere elongation, that led to a non-canonical telomere sequence.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Heterozygous germline variants in human encoding for IKAROS define an inborn error of immunity with immunodeficiency, immune dysregulation and risk of malignancy with a broad phenotypic spectrum. Growing evidence of underlying pathophysiological genotype-phenotype correlations helps to improve our understanding of IKAROS-associated diseases. We describe 6 patients from 4 kindreds with two novel variants leading to haploinsufficiency from 3 centers in Germany.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Common variable immune deficiency (CVID) is a heterogenous group of disorders characterized by varying degrees of hypogammaglobulinemia, recurrent infections, and autoimmunity. Currently, pathogenic variants are identified in approximately 20-30% of CVID cases. Here we report a 3-generation family with autosomal dominant Common Variable Immunodeficiency (CVID) diagnosed in 9 affected individuals.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • * In a study of 9 individuals from 3 families, two variants of AIOLOS (Q402* and E82K) were found to cause haploinsufficiency through different mechanisms, affecting the protein’s DNA binding and stability.
  • * Patients with AIOLOS haploinsufficiency experienced symptoms like reduced immune response, recurrent infections, and autoimmunity, highlighting the broader implications of AIOLOS mutations on health.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Overcoming replicative senescence is an essential step during oncogenesis, and the reactivation of through promoter mutations is a common mechanism. promoter mutations are acquired in about 75% of melanomas but are not sufficient to maintain telomeres, suggesting that additional mutations are required. We identified a cluster of variants in the promoter of encoding the shelterin component TPP1.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Objectives: Hypotension episodes before or after donor brain death are assumed to trigger hypoxia-reoxygenation, causing diffuse alveolar-capillary damage via necrosis. However, alveolar-capillary membranes have direct access to oxygen in alveoli. We hypothesized hypotension-induced lung injury is not diffuse alveolar-capillary damage but interstitial inflammation resulting from nonhypoxic lung ischemia and systemic responses to hypoxic extrapulmonary ischemia.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Uncontrolled donation after cardiac death (uDCD) contributes little to ameliorating donor lung shortage due to rapidly progressive warm ischemia after circulatory arrest. Here, we demonstrated that nonhypoxia improves donor lung viability in a novel uDCD lung transplant model undergoing rapid ventilation after cardiac death and compared the evolution of ischemia-reperfusion injury to mice that underwent pulmonary artery ligation (PAL). The tolerable warm ischemia time at 37°C was initially determined in mice using a modified PAL model.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF