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MYB Haploinsufficiency Causes Familial Autoimmune Cytopenias
Conference proceeding   Open access   Peer reviewed

MYB Haploinsufficiency Causes Familial Autoimmune Cytopenias

Aaron Boothby, Yagiz Anasiz, Jeffery W. Zhong, Debbie Jiang, Taylor K. Watson, Munusamy Ponnan Sivasankaran, Robert J. Weeks, Jackie L. Ludgate, Justin J. Lee, Kerry Lannert, …
Journal of Human Immunity, Vol.2(CIS2026), eCIS2026abstract.16
Clinical Immunology Society (CIS) Annual Meeting 2026 (New Orleans, Louisiana, U.S.A., 06/05/2026–09/05/2026)
01/05/2026
Handle:
https://hdl.handle.net/10523/50779

Abstract

MYB is a transcription factor and master regulator of hematopoiesis with a central role at multiple stages of B and T cell development. We identified ten heterozygous germline MYB variants in seven families and four unrelated singletons. The variants segregated with autoimmune cytopenias, including Evans syndrome, in three five-generation pedigrees. In our cohort of 41 carriers, 22 were affected by autoimmune cytopenias, while one had isolated B cell lymphopenia and neutropenia. All ten variants are absent or ultra-rare in population databases and segregate with disease in the kindreds in an autosomal-dominant pattern with incomplete penetrance. In silico analyses predict that the variants are likely to perturb MYB function. Carriers of select alleles (p.R81X, c.1587+1G>C, p.S407Vfs*13, and c.528-1G>T) from whom biospecimens were available exhibited elevated fetal hemoglobin levels, consistent with reduced MYB function given its established role as a fetal hemoglobin repressor. For the p.R81X and p.S407Vfs*13 alleles, we demonstrated reduced protein expression in activated CD8+ T cells, supporting MYB haploinsufficiency as the underlying mechanism. High-resolution immunophenotyping of carriers of the p.R81X, c.1587+1G>C, and p.S407Vfs*13 alleles revealed expanded T-bet-positive B cells and expanded CD4+ and CD8+ terminal effector T cells, suggesting that reduced MYB function affects lymphocyte differentiation pathways relevant to immune regulation. Together, the segregation, computational, functional, and immunophenotypic data establish damaging germline MYB variants as a dominantly inherited cause of autoimmune cytopenias, expand the spectrum of inborn errors of immunity, and support an immunoregulatory role for MYB in activated lymphocytes. Oral presentation.
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Published (Version of record) Open CC BY-NC-ND V4.0

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