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Wiskott-Aldrich syndrome protein, WASP
Authors:O'Sullivan E  Kinnon C  Brickell P
Institution:Paul O'Gorman Leukaemia Research Fund Centre for Childhood Leukaemia, Molecular Haematology Unit, Institute of Child Health, London, UK.
Abstract:Wiskott-Aldrich Syndrome protein (WASP) is the product of the gene mutated in children with Wiskott-Aldrich Syndrome (WAS). It is a predominantly cytoplasmic protein, expressed only in haematopoietic cells. It binds in vivo to the adaptor proteins Nck and Grb2, to the cytoplasmic protein-tyrosine kinase Fyn and to the small Rho-like GTPase Cdc42, which is required for formation of filopodia in fibroblasts and macrophages. WASP also interacts, directly or indirectly, with the actin cytoskeleton. Together with studies of a closely related, ubiquitously expressed protein named N-WASP, these findings suggest that WASP is a component of signalling pathways that control reorganisation of the actin cytoskeleton in haematopoietic cells in response to external stimuli. In support of this idea, haematopoietic cells from WAS patients show defects in cytoskeletal organisation that compromise their ability to polarise and to migrate in response to physiological stimuli. These defects could account for many of the clinical features of WAS. WAS is now a candidate for gene therapy based on the delivery of a wild-type WASP gene to autologous haematopoietic stem cells. In addition, recent studies of cell defects in WAS patients suggest that it may prove possible, in time, to rescue WAS cells using more conventional drug therapies.
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