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Creators/Authors contains: "Pan-Hammarström, Qiang"

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  1. AbstractLeukopoiesis is lethally arrested in mice lacking the master transcriptional regulator PU.1. Depending on the animal model, subtotal PU.1 loss either induces acute myeloid leukemia or arrests early B-cell and dendritic-cell development. Although humans with absolute PU.1 deficiency have not been reported, a small cadre of congenital agammaglobulinemia patients with sporadic, inborn PU.1 haploinsufficiency was recently described. To better estimate the penetrance, clinical complications, immunophenotypic features, and malignancy risks of PU.1-mutated agammaglobulinemia (PU.MA), a collection of 134 novel or rare PU.1 variants from publicly available databases, institutional cohorts, previously published reports, and unsolved agammaglobulinemia cases were functionally analyzed. In total, 25 loss-of-function (LOF) variants were identified in 33 heterozygous carriers from 21 kindreds across 13 nations. Of individuals harboring LOF PU.1 variants, 22 were agammaglobulinemic, 5 displayed antibody deficiencies, and 6 were unaffected, indicating an estimated disease penetrance of 81.8% with variable expressivity. In a cluster of patients, disease onset was delayed, sometimes into adulthood. All LOF variants conveyed effects via haploinsufficiency, either by destabilizing PU.1, impeding nuclear localization, or directly interfering with transcription. PU.MA patient immunophenotypes consistently demonstrated B-cell, conventional dendritic-cell, and plasmacytoid dendritic-cell deficiencies. Associated infectious and noninfectious symptoms hewed closely to X-linked agammaglobulinemia and not monogenic dendritic-cell deficiencies. No carriers of LOF PU.1 variants experienced hematologic malignancies. Collectively, in vitro and clinical data indicate heterozygous LOF PU.1 variants undermine humoral immunity but do not convey strong leukemic risks. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available May 29, 2026
  2. We report that ~1.8% of all mesothelioma patients and 4.9% of those younger than 55, carry rare germline variants of the BRCA1 associated RING domain 1 (BARD1)gene that were predicted to be damaging by computational analyses. We conducted functional assays, essential for accurate interpretation of missense variants, in primary fibroblasts that we established in tissue culture from a patient carrying the heterozygousBARD1V523Amutation. We found that these cells had genomic instability, reduced DNA repair, and impaired apoptosis. Investigating the underlying signaling pathways, we found that BARD1 forms a trimeric protein complex with p53 and SERCA2 that regulates calcium signaling and apoptosis. We validated these findings inBARD1-silenced primary human mesothelial cells exposed to asbestos. Our study elucidated mechanisms ofBARD1activity and revealed that heterozygous germlineBARD1mutations favor the development of mesothelioma and increase the susceptibility to asbestos carcinogenesis. These mesotheliomas are significantly less aggressive compared to mesotheliomas in asbestos workers. 
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