Immunodeficiency due to defects in store‐operated calcium entry

S Feske - Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 2011 - Wiley Online Library
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, 2011Wiley Online Library
Mutations in genes encoding the calcium‐release activated calcium (CRAC) channel
abolish calcium influx in cells of the immune system and cause severe congenital
immunodeficiency. Patients with autosomal recessive mutations in the CRAC channel gene
ORAI1, its activator stromal interaction molecule 1 (STIM1), and mice with targeted deletion
of Orai1, Stim1, and Stim2 genes reveal important roles for CRAC channels in adaptive and
innate immune responses to infection and in autoimmunity. Because CRAC channels have …
Mutations in genes encoding the calcium‐release activated calcium (CRAC) channel abolish calcium influx in cells of the immune system and cause severe congenital immunodeficiency. Patients with autosomal recessive mutations in the CRAC channel gene ORAI1, its activator stromal interaction molecule 1 (STIM1), and mice with targeted deletion of Orai1, Stim1, and Stim2 genes reveal important roles for CRAC channels in adaptive and innate immune responses to infection and in autoimmunity. Because CRAC channels have important functions outside the immune system, deficiency of either ORAI1 or STIM1 is associated with a unique clinical phenotype. This review will give an overview of CRAC channel function in the immune system, examine the consequences of CRAC channel deficiency for immunity in human patients and mice, and discuss genetic defects in immunoreceptor‐associated signaling molecules that compromise calcium influx and cause immunodeficiency.
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