Mondo Description Combined immunodeficiency due to CD3gamma deficiency is an extremely rare genetic combined primary immunodeficiency characterized by a selective partial lymphopenia (T+/-B+NK+) phenotype and decreased CD3 complex resulting in a variable but usually mild clinical presentation ranging from asymptomatic until adulthood to high susceptibility to infections from early infancy with predominant automimmune manifestations.
Uniprot Description An autosomal recessive primary immunodeficiency characterized by highly variable clinical severity. Some patients have onset of severe recurrent infections in early infancy that may be lethal, whereas others may be only mildly affected or essentially asymptomatic into young adulthood. More severely affected patients may have evidence of autoimmune disease or enteropathy. The immunologic pattern is similar among patients, showing partial T-cell lymphopenia, decreased amounts of the CD3 complex, and impaired proliferative responses to T-cell receptor dependent stimuli. The phenotype in some patients is reminiscent of severe combined immunodeficiency.
Mondo Term and Equivalent IDs
MONDO:0014276: combined immunodeficiency due to CD3gamma deficiency
Download Data for combined immunodeficiency due to CD3gamma deficiency
data still loading...
Counts of Target Development Levels for diseases known to be associated with this disease. If the disease has a valid DOID, targets known to be associated with all child diseases are aggregated. Click "Explore Associated Targets" to view more facets and details for the target list.
This disease has been annotated by GARD as a rare disease.
Description from Mondo Disease Ontology.
Description from UniProt.
DataSources which have contributed target associations to this disease, and the identifiers by which the disease is referenced.
DOID:0060018
GARD:0009521
OMIM:615607
Orphanet:169082
SCTID:725135004
UMLS:C3810107
UMLS:C4510864
MONDO:0014276
High level summary of knowledge for a disease, including descriptions and datasource references.