- Bolze, Alexandre;
- Mahlaoui, Nizar;
- Byun, Minji;
- Turner, Bridget;
- Trede, Nikolaus;
- Ellis, Steven R;
- Abhyankar, Avinash;
- Itan, Yuval;
- Patin, Etienne;
- Brebner, Samuel;
- Sackstein, Paul;
- Puel, Anne;
- Picard, Capucine;
- Abel, Laurent;
- Quintana-Murci, Lluis;
- Faust, Saul N;
- Williams, Anthony P;
- Baretto, Richard;
- Duddridge, Michael;
- Kini, Usha;
- Pollard, Andrew J;
- Gaud, Catherine;
- Frange, Pierre;
- Orbach, Daniel;
- Emile, Jean-Francois;
- Stephan, Jean-Louis;
- Sorensen, Ricardo;
- Plebani, Alessandro;
- Hammarstrom, Lennart;
- Conley, Mary Ellen;
- Selleri, Licia;
- Casanova, Jean-Laurent
Isolated congenital asplenia (ICA) is characterized by the absence of a spleen at birth in individuals with no other developmental defects. The patients are prone to life-threatening bacterial infections. The unbiased analysis of exomes revealed heterozygous mutations in RPSA in 18 patients from eight kindreds, corresponding to more than half the patients and over one-third of the kindreds studied. The clinical penetrance in these kindreds is complete. Expression studies indicated that the mutations carried by the patients-a nonsense mutation, a frameshift duplication, and five different missense mutations-cause autosomal dominant ICA by haploinsufficiency. RPSA encodes ribosomal protein SA, a component of the small subunit of the ribosome. This discovery establishes an essential role for RPSA in human spleen development.