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Clinical Implications of Basic Research
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Volume 348:350-351 January 23, 2003 Number 4
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A Family of WASPs
Scott B. Snapper, M.D., Ph.D., and Fred S. Rosen, M.D.

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The main clinical features of the Wiskott–Aldrich syndrome, an X-linked immunodeficiency, are thrombocytopenia with small platelets, eczema, susceptibility to opportunistic and pyogenic infections, and B-cell lymphomas associated with Epstein–Barr virus. Scanning electron microscopy has revealed that the lymphocytes and platelets of affected boys have a deranged cytoskeleton. The genetic basis of the disease is a mutation in the gene for the Wiskott–Aldrich syndrome protein (WASP), which results in a defective WASP. WASP is found only in blood cells. WASP and several related proteins (the WASP family)1 are all involved in the organization of the actin cytoskeleton. The study of this . . . [Full Text of this Article]


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From Massachusetts General Hospital (S.B.S.); the Center for Blood Research (F.S.R.); and the Departments of Medicine (S.B.S.) and Pediatrics (F.S.R.), Harvard Medical School — all in Boston.

Address reprint requests to Dr. Snapper at Massachusetts General Hospital, Gastrointestinal Unit, J706, 55 Blossom St., Boston, MA 02114, or at ssnapper@hms.harvard.edu.


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