Raras
Buscar doenças, sintomas, genes...
Neutropenia congênita grave autossômica dominante
ORPHA:486CID-10 · D70CID-11 · 4B00.00DOENÇA RARA

É uma forma grave de neutropenia congênita (falta de um tipo de célula de defesa, os neutrófilos, desde o nascimento). É uma condição genética com padrão de herança dominante, o que significa que basta herdar uma cópia do gene alterado para que a doença se manifeste.

Mantido por Agente Raras·Colaborar como especialista →

Introdução

O que você precisa saber de cara

📋

É uma forma grave de neutropenia congênita (falta de um tipo de célula de defesa, os neutrófilos, desde o nascimento). É uma condição genética com padrão de herança dominante, o que significa que basta herdar uma cópia do gene alterado para que a doença se manifeste.

Escala de raridade

CLASSIFICAÇÃO ORPHANET · BRASIL 2024
<1 / 1 000 000
Ultra-rara
<1/50k
Muito rara
1/20k
Rara
1/10k
Pouco freq.
1/5k
Incomum
1/2k
Prevalência
0.0
Europe
Início
Infancy
+ neonatal
🏥
SUS: Cobertura mínimaScore: 20%
Centros em: GO, PR, SC, RS, ES +10CID-10: D70
Você se identifica com essa condição?
O Raras está aqui pra te apoiar — com ou sem diagnóstico

Encontrou um erro ou informação desatualizada? Sugira uma correção →

Entender a doença

Do básico ao detalhe, leia no seu ritmo

Preparando trilha educativa...

Sinais e sintomas

O que aparece no corpo e com que frequência cada sintoma acontece

Partes do corpo afetadas

🩸
Sangue
8 sintomas
🫃
Digestivo
3 sintomas
🦴
Ossos e articulações
2 sintomas
🛡️
Imunológico
2 sintomas
🫁
Pulmão
2 sintomas
🧬
Pele e cabelo
1 sintomas

+ 17 sintomas em outras categorias

Características mais comuns

100%prev.
Contagem total de neutrófilos diminuída
90%prev.
Infecções bacterianas recorrentes
Muito frequente (99-80%)
90%prev.
Infecções virais recorrentes
Muito frequente (99-80%)
55%prev.
Infecção recorrente do trato gastrointestinal
Frequente (79-30%)
55%prev.
Febre
Frequente (79-30%)
55%prev.
Monocitose
Frequente (79-30%)
38sintomas
Muito frequente (3)
Frequente (16)
Ocasional (12)
Sem dados (7)

Os sintomas variam de pessoa para pessoa. Abaixo estão as 38 características clínicas mais associadas, ordenadas por frequência.

Contagem total de neutrófilos diminuídaDecreased total neutrophil count
Muito frequente100%
Infecções bacterianas recorrentesRecurrent bacterial infections
Muito frequente (99-80%)90%
Infecções virais recorrentesRecurrent viral infections
Muito frequente (99-80%)90%
Infecção recorrente do trato gastrointestinalRecurrent infection of the gastrointestinal tract
Frequente (79-30%)55%
FebreFever
Frequente (79-30%)55%

Linha do tempo da pesquisa

Publicações por ano — veja quando o interesse científico cresceu
Anos de pesquisa1desde 2026
Últimos 10 anos19publicações
Pico20224 papers
Linha do tempo
2026Hoje · 2026📈 2022Ano de pico
Publicações por ano (últimos 10 anos)

Encontrou um erro ou informação desatualizada? Sugira uma correção →

Genética e causas

O que está alterado no DNA e como passa nas famílias

Genes associados

5 genes identificados com associação a esta condição. Padrão de herança: Autosomal dominant.

CLPBMitochondrial disaggregaseDisease-causing germline mutation(s) (loss of function) inTolerante
FUNÇÃO

Functions as a regulatory ATPase and participates in secretion/protein trafficking process. Has ATP-dependent protein disaggregase activity and is required to maintain the solubility of key mitochondrial proteins (PubMed:32573439, PubMed:34115842, PubMed:35247700, PubMed:36170828, PubMed:36745679). Involved in mitochondrial-mediated antiviral innate immunity, activates RIG-I-mediated signal transduction and production of IFNB1 and pro-inflammatory cytokine IL6 (PubMed:31522117). Plays a role in

LOCALIZAÇÃO

Mitochondrion intermembrane space

MECANISMO DE DOENÇA

3-methylglutaconic aciduria 7B

An autosomal recessive inborn error of metabolism with a highly variable phenotype. Primary disease symptoms are increased levels of 3-methylglutaconic acid, neurologic deterioration and neutropenia. Other common features include progressive encephalopathy, movement abnormalities, delayed psychomotor development,impaired intellectual development, cataracts, seizures, and recurrent infections.

OUTRAS DOENÇAS (4)
neutropenia, severe congenital, 9, autosomal dominant3-methylglutaconic aciduria, type VIIA3-methylglutaconic aciduria, type VIIBautosomal dominant severe congenital neutropenia
HGNC:30664UniProt:Q9H078
GFI1Zinc finger protein Gfi-1Disease-causing germline mutation(s) inRestrito
FUNÇÃO

Transcription repressor essential for hematopoiesis (PubMed:11060035, PubMed:17197705, PubMed:17646546, PubMed:18805794, PubMed:19164764, PubMed:20190815, PubMed:8754800). Functions in a cell-context and development-specific manner (PubMed:11060035, PubMed:17197705, PubMed:17646546, PubMed:18805794, PubMed:19164764, PubMed:20190815, PubMed:8754800). Binds to 5'-TAAATCAC[AT]GCA-3' in the promoter region of a large number of genes (PubMed:11060035, PubMed:17197705, PubMed:17646546, PubMed:18805794

LOCALIZAÇÃO

Nucleus

VIAS BIOLÓGICAS (1)
Transcriptional regulation of granulopoiesis
MECANISMO DE DOENÇA

Neutropenia, severe congenital 2, autosomal dominant

A disorder of hematopoiesis characterized by maturation arrest of granulopoiesis at the level of promyelocytes with peripheral blood absolute neutrophil counts below 0.5 x 10(9)/l and early onset of severe bacterial infections.

EXPRESSÃO TECIDUAL(Tecido-específico)
Linfócitos
12.6 TPM
Baço
9.7 TPM
Intestino delgado
7.7 TPM
Pâncreas
5.6 TPM
Sangue
4.4 TPM
OUTRAS DOENÇAS (3)
neutropenia, severe congenital, 2, autosomal dominantnonimmune chronic idiopathic neutropenia of adultsautosomal dominant severe congenital neutropenia
HGNC:4237UniProt:Q99684
ELANENeutrophil elastaseDisease-causing germline mutation(s) inTolerante
FUNÇÃO

Serine protease that modifies the functions of natural killer cells, monocytes and granulocytes. Inhibits C5a-dependent neutrophil enzyme release and chemotaxis (PubMed:15140022). Promotes cleavage of GSDMB, thereby inhibiting pyroptosis (PubMed:36899106). Promotes blood coagulation (PubMed:20676107). Through the activation of the platelet fibrinogen receptor integrin alpha-IIb/beta-3, potentiates platelet aggregation induced by a threshold concentration of cathepsin G (CTSG) (PubMed:25211214, P

LOCALIZAÇÃO

Cytoplasmic vesicle, phagosome

VIAS BIOLÓGICAS (1)
Pyroptosis
MECANISMO DE DOENÇA

Cyclic haematopoiesis

Autosomal dominant disease in which blood-cell production from the bone marrow oscillates with 21-day periodicity. Circulating neutrophils vary between almost normal numbers and zero. During intervals of neutropenia, affected individuals are at risk for opportunistic infection. Monocytes, platelets, lymphocytes and reticulocytes also cycle with the same frequency.

EXPRESSÃO TECIDUAL(Tecido-específico)
Sangue
64.3 TPM
Baço
19.6 TPM
Pulmão
11.5 TPM
Tireoide
5.8 TPM
Tecido adiposo
5.2 TPM
OUTRAS DOENÇAS (3)
cyclic hematopoiesisneutropenia, severe congenital, 1, autosomal dominantautosomal dominant severe congenital neutropenia
HGNC:3309UniProt:P08246
TCIRG1V-type proton ATPase 116 kDa subunit a 3Disease-causing germline mutation(s) inTolerante
FUNÇÃO

Subunit of the V0 complex of vacuolar(H+)-ATPase (V-ATPase), a multisubunit enzyme composed of a peripheral complex (V1) that hydrolyzes ATP and a membrane integral complex (V0) that translocates protons (By similarity). V-ATPase is responsible for acidifying and maintaining the pH of intracellular compartments and in some cell types, is targeted to the plasma membrane, where it is responsible for acidifying the extracellular environment (By similarity). Seems to be directly involved in T-cell a

LOCALIZAÇÃO

Membrane

VIAS BIOLÓGICAS (3)
Insulin receptor recyclingTransferrin endocytosis and recyclingIon channel transport
MECANISMO DE DOENÇA

Osteopetrosis, autosomal recessive 1

A rare genetic disease characterized by abnormally dense bone, due to defective resorption of immature bone. Osteopetrosis occurs in two forms: a severe autosomal recessive form occurring in utero, infancy, or childhood, and a benign autosomal dominant form occurring in adolescence or adulthood. Recessive osteopetrosis commonly manifests in early infancy with macrocephaly, feeding difficulties, evolving blindness and deafness, bone marrow failure, severe anemia, and hepatosplenomegaly. Deafness and blindness are generally thought to represent effects of pressure on nerves.

EXPRESSÃO TECIDUAL(Ubíquo)
Sangue
473.7 TPM
Baço
357.4 TPM
Cervix Endocervix
257.4 TPM
Pulmão
249.1 TPM
Cervix Ectocervix
190.2 TPM
OUTRAS DOENÇAS (5)
autosomal recessive osteopetrosis 1autosomal dominant severe congenital neutropeniadysosteosclerosisautosomal recessive osteopetrosis
HGNC:11647UniProt:Q13488
SRP19Signal recognition particle 19 kDa proteinDisease-causing germline mutation(s) inTolerante
FUNÇÃO

Component of the signal recognition particle (SRP) complex, a ribonucleoprotein complex that mediates the cotranslational targeting of secretory and membrane proteins to the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) (By similarity). Binds directly to 7SL RNA (By similarity). Mediates binding of SRP54 to the SRP complex (By similarity)

LOCALIZAÇÃO

CytoplasmNucleus, nucleolusNucleus, nucleoplasm

VIAS BIOLÓGICAS (1)
SRP-dependent cotranslational protein targeting to membrane
EXPRESSÃO TECIDUAL(Ubíquo)
Pituitária
33.5 TPM
Linfócitos
27.8 TPM
Tireoide
26.5 TPM
Fibroblastos
25.8 TPM
Próstata
23.4 TPM
OUTRAS DOENÇAS (1)
autosomal dominant severe congenital neutropenia
HGNC:11300UniProt:P09132

Medicamentos aprovados (FDA)

1 medicamento encontrado nos registros da FDA americana.

💊 Jynarque (TOLVAPTAN)
Ver no DailyMed/FDA

Variantes genéticas (ClinVar)

542 variantes patogênicas registradas no ClinVar.

🧬 SRP19: NM_003135.3(SRP19):c.302-161G>C ()
🧬 SRP19: NM_003135.3(SRP19):c.190-12C>T ()
🧬 SRP19: NM_003135.3(SRP19):c.189+5G>C ()
🧬 SRP19: NC_000005.9:g.(?_112178722)_(112253753_?)del ()
🧬 SRP19: NC_000005.9:g.(?_112174702)_(112203173_?)del ()
Ver todas no ClinVar

Classificação de variantes (ClinVar)

Distribuição de 1 variantes classificadas pelo ClinVar.

1
Patogênica (100.0%)
VARIANTES MAIS SIGNIFICATIVAS
ELANE: NM_001972.4(ELANE):c.674C>G (p.Ser225Ter) [Likely pathogenic]

Diagnóstico

Os sinais que médicos procuram e os exames que confirmam

Carregando...

Tratamento e manejo

Remédios, cuidados de apoio e o que precisa acompanhar

Carregando informações de tratamento...

Onde tratar no SUS

Hospitais de referência no Brasil e o protocolo oficial do SUS (PCDT)

🇧🇷 Atendimento SUS — Neutropenia congênita grave autossômica dominante

Centros de Referência SUS

24 centros habilitados pelo SUS para Neutropenia congênita grave autossômica dominante

Centros para Neutropenia congênita grave autossômica dominante

Detalhes dos centros

Hospital Universitário Prof. Edgard Santos (HUPES)

R. Dr. Augusto Viana, s/n - Canela, Salvador - BA, 40110-060 · CNES 0003808

Serviço de Referência

Rota
Anomalias CongênitasErros Inatos do Metabolismo

Hospital Infantil Albert Sabin

R. Tertuliano Sales, 544 - Vila União, Fortaleza - CE, 60410-794 · CNES 2407876

Serviço de Referência

Rota
Anomalias CongênitasDeficiência Intelectual

Hospital de Apoio de Brasília (HAB)

AENW 3 Lote A Setor Noroeste - Plano Piloto, Brasília - DF, 70684-831 · CNES 0010456

Serviço de Referência

Rota
Anomalias CongênitasErros Inatos do MetabolismoDeficiência Intelectual

Hospital Estadual Infantil e Maternidade Alzir Bernardino Alves (HIABA)

Av. Min. Salgado Filho, 918 - Soteco, Vila Velha - ES, 29106-010 · CNES 6631207

Serviço de Referência

Rota
Anomalias CongênitasErros Inatos do MetabolismoDeficiência Intelectual

Hospital das Clínicas da UFG

Rua 235 QD. 68 Lote Área, Nº 285, s/nº - Setor Leste Universitário, Goiânia - GO, 74605-050 · CNES 2338424

Serviço de Referência

Rota
Anomalias CongênitasErros Inatos do Metabolismo

Hospital Universitário da UFJF

R. Catulo Breviglieri, Bairro - s/n - Santa Catarina, Juiz de Fora - MG, 36036-110 · CNES 2297442

Atenção Especializada

Rota
Anomalias Congênitas

Hospital das Clínicas da UFMG

Av. Prof. Alfredo Balena, 110 - Santa Efigênia, Belo Horizonte - MG, 30130-100 · CNES 2280167

Serviço de Referência

Rota
Anomalias CongênitasErros Inatos do MetabolismoDeficiência Intelectual

Hospital Universitário Julio Müller (HUJM)

R. Luis Philippe Pereira Leite, s/n - Alvorada, Cuiabá - MT, 78048-902 · CNES 2726092

Atenção Especializada

Rota
Anomalias Congênitas

Hospital Universitário João de Barros Barreto

R. dos Mundurucus, 4487 - Guamá, Belém - PA, 66073-000 · CNES 2337878

Serviço de Referência

Rota
Anomalias CongênitasErros Inatos do MetabolismoDeficiência Intelectual

Hospital Universitário Lauro Wanderley (HULW)

R. Tabeliao Estanislau Eloy, 585 - Castelo Branco, João Pessoa - PB, 58050-585 · CNES 0002470

Atenção Especializada

Rota
Anomalias Congênitas

Instituto de Medicina Integral Prof. Fernando Figueira (IMIP)

R. dos Coelhos, 300 - Boa Vista, Recife - PE, 50070-902 · CNES 0000647

Serviço de Referência

Rota
Anomalias CongênitasErros Inatos do MetabolismoDeficiência Intelectual

Hospital Pequeno Príncipe

R. Des. Motta, 1070 - Água Verde, Curitiba - PR, 80250-060 · CNES 3143805

Serviço de Referência

Rota
Anomalias CongênitasDeficiência Intelectual

Hospital Universitário Regional de Maringá (HUM)

Av. Mandacaru, 1590 - Parque das Laranjeiras, Maringá - PR, 87083-240 · CNES 2216108

Atenção Especializada

Rota
Anomalias Congênitas

Hospital de Clínicas da UFPR

R. Gen. Carneiro, 181 - Alto da Glória, Curitiba - PR, 80060-900 · CNES 2364980

Serviço de Referência

Rota
Anomalias CongênitasErros Inatos do MetabolismoDeficiência Intelectual

Hospital Universitário Pedro Ernesto (HUPE-UERJ)

Blvd. 28 de Setembro, 77 - Vila Isabel, Rio de Janeiro - RJ, 20551-030 · CNES 2280221

Serviço de Referência

Rota
Anomalias CongênitasErros Inatos do Metabolismo

Instituto Nacional de Saúde da Mulher, da Criança e do Adolescente Fernandes Figueira (IFF/Fiocruz)

Av. Rui Barbosa, 716 - Flamengo, Rio de Janeiro - RJ, 22250-020 · CNES 2269988

Serviço de Referência

Rota
Anomalias CongênitasErros Inatos do MetabolismoDeficiência Intelectual

Hospital São Lucas da PUCRS

Av. Ipiranga, 6690 - Jardim Botânico, Porto Alegre - RS, 90610-000 · CNES 2232928

Serviço de Referência

Rota
Anomalias CongênitasErros Inatos do Metabolismo

Hospital de Clínicas de Porto Alegre (HCPA)

Rua Ramiro Barcelos, 2350 Bloco A - Av. Protásio Alves, 211 - Bloco B e C - Santa Cecília, Porto Alegre - RS, 90035-903 · CNES 2237601

Serviço de Referência

Rota
Anomalias CongênitasErros Inatos do MetabolismoDeficiência Intelectual

Hospital Universitário da UFSC (HU-UFSC)

R. Profa. Maria Flora Pausewang - Trindade, Florianópolis - SC, 88036-800 · CNES 2560356

Serviço de Referência

Rota
Anomalias CongênitasErros Inatos do Metabolismo

Hospital das Clínicas da FMUSP

R. Dr. Ovídio Pires de Campos, 225 - Cerqueira César, São Paulo - SP, 05403-010 · CNES 2077485

Serviço de Referência

Rota
Anomalias CongênitasErros Inatos do MetabolismoDeficiência Intelectual

Hospital de Base de São José do Rio Preto

Av. Brg. Faria Lima, 5544 - Vila Sao Jose, São José do Rio Preto - SP, 15090-000 · CNES 2079798

Atenção Especializada

Rota
Anomalias Congênitas

Hospital de Clínicas da UNICAMP

R. Vital Brasil, 251 - Cidade Universitária, Campinas - SP, 13083-888 · CNES 2748223

Serviço de Referência

Rota
Anomalias CongênitasErros Inatos do MetabolismoDeficiência Intelectual

Hospital de Clínicas de Ribeirão Preto (HCRP-USP)

R. Ten. Catão Roxo, 3900 - Vila Monte Alegre, Ribeirão Preto - SP, 14015-010 · CNES 2082187

Serviço de Referência

Rota
Anomalias CongênitasErros Inatos do MetabolismoDeficiência Intelectual

UNIFESP / Hospital São Paulo

R. Napoleão de Barros, 715 - Vila Clementino, São Paulo - SP, 04024-002 · CNES 2688689

Serviço de Referência

Rota
Anomalias CongênitasErros Inatos do Metabolismo
Sobre os centros SUS: Estes centros são habilitados pelo Ministério da Saúde como Serviços de Referência em Doenças Raras ou Serviços de Atenção Especializada. O atendimento é pelo SUS, com encaminhamento da rede de atenção básica.

Dados de DATASUS/CNES, SBGM, ABNeuro e Ministério da Saúde. Sempre confirme a disponibilidade diretamente com o estabelecimento.

Pesquisa ativa

Ensaios clínicos abertos e novidades científicas recentes

Pesquisa e ensaios clínicos

Nenhum ensaio clínico registrado para esta condição.

🧪 Está conduzindo uma pesquisa?
Divulgue para pacientes e familiares que acompanham esta doença.
Divulgar pesquisa →

Publicações mais relevantes

Timeline de publicações
0 papers (10 anos)
#1

Germ line LCP1 mutations cause immunodeficiency with neutropenia, monocytopenia, lymphopenia, and defective cytokinesis.

Blood advances2026 Feb 10

Severe congenital neutropenia (SCN) is characterized by neutropenia, recurrent infections, and an increased leukemia risk. Multiple genetic defects that underlie SCN have been identified, but a genetic diagnosis is still lacking in a significant proportion of patients. In this study, we report 4 independent pedigrees with heterozygous variants in LCP1. Variants c.740-1G>T and c.740-20_744del produced the same alternatively spliced RNA product, causing an in-frame deletion (p.A247_E254del). Variant c.509C>T in the third pedigree produced p.S170L, and variant c.806T>C in the fourth pedigree produced p.L269P. Affected individuals suffered from neutropenia, poor or complete lack of response to granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) treatment, and variable degrees of lymphopenia, hypogammaglobulinemia, and monocytopenia. Patients with A247_E254del and p.L269P presented with tetraploid cells in the bone marrow, indicative of disturbed cytokinesis. In one of these kindreds, 2 individuals developed acute leukemia. G-CSF nonresponsiveness and defective cell cycling were repaired upon correction of the LCP1 A247_E254del variant in patient-derived induced pluripotent stem cells, supporting the monogenic origin of the disease. Indicative of their gain-of-function effect, both the A247_E254del and S170L variants increased F-actin bundling and the formation of abnormal protrusions. Single-cell transcriptome analysis of A247_E254del bone marrow-derived hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs) showed deregulation of signaling pathways that control mitosis in multilineage and lymphoid-primed HSPC subsets. We concluded that activating LCP1 variants cause a new hematopoietic disorder with autosomal dominant inheritance. Depending on the consequences of the LCP1 variants in terms of protein structure, patients may suffer from G-CSF refractory severe neutropenia, lymphopenia, hypogammaglobulinemia, monocytopenia, and defective cytokinesis.

#2

Targeted inhibition of ELANE expression using adenine base editing to treat severe congenital neutropenia.

Molecular therapy. Methods &amp; clinical development2025 Dec 11

Autosomal dominant mutations in ELANE (elastase, neutrophil expressed) cause severe congenital neutropenia (CN) and cyclic neutropenia (CyN). Inhibiting ELANE expression, either by CRISPR-Cas9-mediated ELANE knockout or promoter targeting using CRISPR-Cas9 nickase, has emerged as a promising gene therapy strategy to restore defective granulocytic differentiation of transplantable hematopoietic stem cells from CN patients. We developed an adenine base editor (ABE)-mediated approach targeting two nucleotides in the ELANE promoter to suppress neutrophil elastase expression, called PRECISE. Analysis of mRNA- and protein-based delivery of ABE revealed that although both platforms were effective in editing hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells from healthy donors with over 80% editing, only protein-based ABE delivery achieved over 68% editing in CN patient cells. Interestingly, 10%-19% editing in CN patients' hematopoietic cells using ABE mRNA restored their granulocytic differentiation in vitro, with a marked expansion and differentiation of ABE ribonucleoprotein (RNP)-edited cells. PRECISE-edited neutrophils retained normal function, including neutrophil extracellular trap formation, oxidative burst, and phagocytosis. Genome integrity analysis showed no genomic alterations or chromosomal aberrations, and only two off-target edits confined to non-coding intronic regions. In conclusion, PRECISE represents a translationally relevant base-editing strategy for ELANE-associated CN and CyN that addresses ELANE mutation heterogeneity.

#3

CRISPR-Cas9n-mediated ELANE promoter editing for gene therapy of severe congenital neutropenia.

Molecular therapy : the journal of the American Society of Gene Therapy2024 Jun 05

Severe congenital neutropenia (CN) is an inherited pre-leukemia bone marrow failure syndrome commonly caused by autosomal-dominant ELANE mutations (ELANE-CN). ELANE-CN patients are treated with daily injections of recombinant human granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (rhG-CSF). However, some patients do not respond to rhG-CSF, and approximately 15% of ELANE-CN patients develop myelodysplasia or acute myeloid leukemia. Here, we report the development of a curative therapy for ELANE-CN through inhibition of ELANE mRNA expression by introducing two single-strand DNA breaks at the opposing DNA strands of the ELANE promoter TATA box using CRISPR-Cas9D10A nickases-termed MILESTONE. This editing effectively restored defective neutrophil differentiation of ELANE-CN CD34+ hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells (HSPCs) in vitro and in vivo, without affecting the functions of the edited neutrophils. CRISPResso analysis of the edited ELANE-CN CD34+ HSPCs revealed on-target efficiencies of over 90%. Simultaneously, GUIDE-seq, CAST-Seq, and rhAmpSeq indicated a safe off-target profile with no off-target sites or chromosomal translocations. Taken together, ex vivo gene editing of ELANE-CN HSPCs using MILESTONE in the setting of autologous stem cell transplantation could be a universal, safe, and efficient gene therapy approach for ELANE-CN patients.

#4

Comparison of Gene-Editing Approaches for Severe Congenital Neutropenia-Causing Mutations in the ELANE Gene.

The CRISPR journal2024 Oct

Safety considerations for gene therapies of inherited preleukemia syndromes, including severe congenital neutropenia (CN), are paramount. We compared several strategies for CRISPR/Cas9 gene editing of autosomal-dominant ELANE mutations in CD34+ cells from two CN patients head-to-head. We tested universal and allele-specific ELANE knockout, ELANE mutation correction by homology-directed repair (HDR) with AAV6, and allele-specific HDR with ssODN. All strategies were not toxic, had at least 30% editing, and rescued granulopoiesis in vitro. In contrast to published data, allele-specific indels in the last exon of ELANE also restored granulopoiesis. Moreover, by implementing patient-derived induced pluripotent stem cells for GUIDE-Seq off-target analysis, we established a clinically relevant "personalized" assessment of off-target activity of gene editing on the background of the patient's genome. We found that allele-specific approaches had the most favorable off-target profiles. Taken together, a well-defined head-to-head comparison pipeline for selecting the appropriate gene therapy is essential for diseases, with several gene editing strategies available.

#5

Congenital neutropenia: From lab bench to clinic bedside and back.

Mutation research. Reviews in mutation research2024

Neutropenia is a hematological condition characterized by a decrease in absolute neutrophil count (ANC) in peripheral blood, typically classified in adults as mild (1-1.5 × 109/L), moderate (0.5-1 × 109/L), or severe (< 0.5 × 109/L). It can be categorized into two types: congenital and acquired. Congenital severe chronic neutropenia (SCN) arises from mutations in various genes, with different inheritance patterns, including autosomal recessive, autosomal dominant, and X-linked forms, often linked to mitochondrial diseases. The most common genetic cause is alterations in the ELANE gene. Some cases exist as non-syndromic neutropenia within the SCN spectrum, where genetic origins remain unidentified. The clinical consequences of congenital neutropenia depend on granulocyte levels and dysfunction. Infants with this condition often experience recurrent bacterial infections, with approximately half facing severe infections within their first six months of life. These infections commonly affect the respiratory system, digestive tract, and skin, resulting in symptoms like fever, abscesses, and even sepsis. The severity of these symptoms varies, and the specific organs and systems affected depend on the genetic defect. Congenital neutropenia elevates the risk of developing acute myeloid leukemia (AML) or myelodysplastic syndromes (MDS), particularly with certain genetic variants. SCN patients may acquire CSF3R and RUNX1 mutations, which can predict the development of leukemia. It is important to note that high-dose granulocyte colony-stimulating factor (G-CSF) treatment may have the potential to promote leukemogenesis. Treatment for neutropenia involves antibiotics, drugs that boost neutrophil production, or bone marrow transplants. Immediate treatment is essential due to the heightened risk of severe infections. In severe congenital or cyclic neutropenia (CyN), the primary therapy is G-CSF, often combined with antibiotics. The G-CSF dosage is gradually increased to normalize neutrophil counts. Hematopoietic stem cell transplants are considered for non-responders or those at risk of AML/MDS. In cases of WHIM syndrome, CXCR4 inhibitors can be effective. Future treatments may involve gene editing and the use of the diabetes drug empagliflozin to alleviate neutropenia symptoms.

Publicações recentes

Ver todas no PubMed

📚 EuropePMC3 artigos no totalmostrando 19

2025

Targeted inhibition of ELANE expression using adenine base editing to treat severe congenital neutropenia.

Molecular therapy. Methods &amp; clinical development
2026

Germ line LCP1 mutations cause immunodeficiency with neutropenia, monocytopenia, lymphopenia, and defective cytokinesis.

Blood advances
2024

Comparison of Gene-Editing Approaches for Severe Congenital Neutropenia-Causing Mutations in the ELANE Gene.

The CRISPR journal
2024

CRISPR-Cas9n-mediated ELANE promoter editing for gene therapy of severe congenital neutropenia.

Molecular therapy : the journal of the American Society of Gene Therapy
2024

Congenital neutropenia: From lab bench to clinic bedside and back.

Mutation research. Reviews in mutation research
2022

[Congenital neutropenia type IV: case report].

Archivos argentinos de pediatria
2022

Case Report: Association between cyclic neutropenia and SRP54 deficiency.

Frontiers in immunology
2022

Mutant allele knockout with novel CRISPR nuclease promotes myelopoiesis in ELANE neutropenia.

Molecular therapy. Methods &amp; clinical development
2022

In Silico Analysis Revealed Five Novel High-Risk Single-Nucleotide Polymorphisms (rs200384291, rs201163886, rs193141883, rs201139487, and rs201723157) in ELANE Gene Causing Autosomal Dominant Severe Congenital Neutropenia 1 and Cyclic Hematopoiesis.

TheScientificWorldJournal
2021

Neutrophil elastase: Nonsense lost in translation.

Cell stem cell
2020

CRISPR-Cas9-Mediated ELANE Mutation Correction in Hematopoietic Stem and Progenitor Cells to Treat Severe Congenital Neutropenia.

Molecular therapy : the journal of the American Society of Gene Therapy
2020

Defective Sec61α1 underlies a novel cause of autosomal dominant severe congenital neutropenia.

The Journal of allergy and clinical immunology
2019

WHIM Syndrome: from Pathogenesis Towards Personalized Medicine and Cure.

Journal of clinical immunology
2020

CRISPR/Cas9-mediated ELANE knockout enables neutrophilic maturation of primary hematopoietic stem and progenitor cells and induced pluripotent stem cells of severe congenital neutropenia patients.

Haematologica
2019

Description of an ELANE Mutation in a Girl with Severe Congenital Neutropenia: A Paradigm of Targeted Genetic Screening Based on Clinical Findings.

Journal of pediatric genetics
2018

Mutations in the SRP54 gene cause severe congenital neutropenia as well as Shwachman-Diamond-like syndrome.

Blood
2017

Mutations in signal recognition particle SRP54 cause syndromic neutropenia with Shwachman-Diamond-like features.

The Journal of clinical investigation
2017

Severe congenital neutropenias.

Nature reviews. Disease primers
2015

Paternal Somatic Mosaicism of a Novel Frameshift Mutation in ELANE Causing Severe Congenital Neutropenia.

Pediatric blood &amp; cancer

Associações

Organizações que acompanham esta doença — pra ter apoio e orientação

Ainda não temos associações cadastradas para Neutropenia congênita grave autossômica dominante.

É de uma associação que acompanha esta doença? Fale com a gente →

Comunidades

Grupos ativos de quem convive com esta doença aqui no Raras

Ainda não existe comunidade no Raras para Neutropenia congênita grave autossômica dominante

Pacientes, familiares e cuidadores se organizam em comunidades pra compartilhar experiências, fazer perguntas e se apoiar. Você pode ser o primeiro.

Tire suas dúvidas

Perguntas, dicas e experiências compartilhadas aqui na página

Participe da discussão

Faça login para postar dúvidas, compartilhar experiências e interagir com especialistas.

Fazer login

Doenças relacionadas

Doenças com sintomas parecidos — ajudam quem ainda está buscando diagnóstico

Referências e fontes

Bases de dados externas citadas neste artigo

Publicações científicas

Artigos indexados no PubMed ligados a esta doença no grafo RarasNet — título, periódico e PMID direto da fonte, sem intermediação de IA.

  1. Germ line LCP1 mutations cause immunodeficiency with neutropenia, monocytopenia, lymphopenia, and defective cytokinesis.
    Blood advances· 2026· PMID 41056520mais citado
  2. Targeted inhibition of ELANE expression using adenine base editing to treat severe congenital neutropenia.
    Molecular therapy. Methods &amp; clinical development· 2025· PMID 41438873mais citado
  3. CRISPR-Cas9n-mediated ELANE promoter editing for gene therapy of severe congenital neutropenia.
    Molecular therapy : the journal of the American Society of Gene Therapy· 2024· PMID 38556793mais citado
  4. Comparison of Gene-Editing Approaches for Severe Congenital Neutropenia-Causing Mutations in the ELANE Gene.
    The CRISPR journal· 2024· PMID 39436283mais citado
  5. Congenital neutropenia: From lab bench to clinic bedside and back.
    Mutation research. Reviews in mutation research· 2024· PMID 37989463mais citado
  6. Prenatal diagnosis of fetuses with renal abnormalities: a retrospective analysis of 329 Chinese cases.
    Orphanet J Rare Dis· 2025· PMID 40993696recente
  7. Liver transplantation in a boy with TFAM mutation associated mtDNA depletion syndrome.
    Orphanet J Rare Dis· 2024· PMID 39716297recente
  8. Apixaban and Limiting Aspirin for Patients With Atrial Fibrillation, Percutaneous Coronary Intervention, and Multimorbidity.
    JACC Adv· 2024· PMID 39493312recente
  9. Genetic findings of Sanger and nanopore single-molecule sequencing in patients with X-linked hearing loss and incomplete partition type III.
    Orphanet J Rare Dis· 2022· PMID 35189936recente
  10. Music therapy and Sanfilippo syndrome: an analysis of psychological and physiological variables of three case studies.
    Orphanet J Rare Dis· 2021· PMID 34801065recente

Bases de dados e fontes oficiais

Identificadores e referências canônicas usadas para montar este verbete.

  1. ORPHA:486(Orphanet)
  2. MONDO:0008742(MONDO)
  3. GARD:9558(GARD (NIH))
  4. Variantes catalogadas(ClinVar)
  5. Busca completa no PubMed(PubMed)

Dados compilados pelo RarasNet a partir de fontes abertas (Orphanet, OMIM, MONDO, PubMed/EuropePMC, ClinicalTrials.gov, DATASUS, PCDT/MS). Este conteúdo é informativo e não substitui avaliação médica.

Conteúdo mantido por Agente Raras · Médicos e pesquisadores podem colaborar

Neutropenia congênita grave autossômica dominante
Compêndio · Raras BR

Neutropenia congênita grave autossômica dominante

ORPHA:486 · MONDO:0008742
Prevalência
<1 / 1 000 000
Herança
Autosomal dominant
CID-10
D70 · Agranulocitose
CID-11
Início
Infancy, Neonatal
Prevalência
0.0 (Europe)
MedGen
UMLS
C4749612
EuropePMC
DiscussaoAtiva

Nenhuma novidade ainda. O agente esta monitorando.

0membros
0novidades