Evidence for male X chromosomal mosaicism in X-linked agammaglobulinemia
- PMID: 2571563
- DOI: 10.1007/BF00285169
Evidence for male X chromosomal mosaicism in X-linked agammaglobulinemia
Abstract
X-Linked agammaglobulinemia (XLA) is a severe antibody deficiency disease in man, resulting from an arrest in differentiation of pre-B cells. XLA is recessive: female carriers do not exhibit antibody deficiency, but manifest an exclusive inactivation of the XLA-carrying X chromosome in all peripheral blood B lymphocytes. An exclusive inactivation of the paternal X chromosome in the B lymphocytes of all daughters of a male who had no agammaglobulinemia demonstrated that the XLA defect can originate from healthy males. These males are X chromosomal mosaics. X-Chromosomal RFLP segregation analyses in other XLA pedigrees suggest a frequent introduction of XLA by healthy males. This implies that XLA often originates from mitotic errors, either at postmeiotic or early postzygotic stages.