Italian Journal of Pediatrics (Feb 2013)

The R156H variation in IL-12Rβ1 is not a mutation

  • van de Vosse Esther,
  • van Dissel Jaap T,
  • Palamaro Loredana,
  • Giardino Giuliana,
  • Santamaria Francesca,
  • Romano Rosa,
  • Fusco Anna,
  • Montella Silvia,
  • Salerno Mariacarolina,
  • Ursini Matilde Valeria,
  • Pignata Claudio

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1824-7288-39-12
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 39, no. 1
p. 12

Abstract

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Abstract Palamaro et al. describe a child with recurrent bronchopneumonia and very high IgE levels in which a variation, R156H, was found in the IL12RB1 gene that encodes the IL-12Rβ1 chain. Based on the absence of this variation in 50 unrelated individuals they conclude it is a mutation. We (van de Vosse and van Dissel) feel there is no reason to suspect a defect in IL-12 signaling based on the clinical data, nor evidence for a functional defect in IL-12 signaling in this patient. In addition, the variation is not novel and known as a polymorphism. Without any functional evidence that R156H is a mutation, the current claim is not substantiated. Palamaro et al. respond to argue that the amino acid substitution, R156H described in the described case exerts a summatory effect, as a genetic cofactor, along with an additional and still unidentified molecular alteration of the same pathway.

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