Human ADA2 deficiency (DADA2) is an inborn error of immunity with a broad clinical phenotype which encompasses vasculopathy including livedo racemosa and lacunar strokes, as well as hemato-immunological features. Diagnosis is based on the combination of decreased serum ADA2 activity and the identification of biallelic deleterious alleles in the ADA2 gene. DADA2 carriers harbor a single pathogenic variant in ADA2 and are mostly considered healthy and asymptomatic. However, some DADA2 carriers present a phenotype compatible with DADA2. Here, we report ten patients from seven kindreds presenting with a phenotype indicative of DADA2, in whom only a single pathogenic variant (p.G47R, p.G47V, p.R169Q, p.H424N) was identified. To test whether being heterozygote for specific variants could explain the patients' phenotype, we investigated the effect of the ADA2 missense variants p.G47A, p.G47R, p.G47V, p.G47W, p.R169Q, p.E328K, p.T360A, p.N370K, p.H424N and p.Y453C on ADA2 protein expression, secretion and enzymatic activity. Functional studies indicate that they exert a dominant negative effect on ADA2 enzymatic activity, dimerization and/or secretion. At the molecular level, heterozygosity for these variants mimics what is observed in DADA2. We conclude that humans with heterozygous dominant negative missense variants in ADA2 are at risk of DADA2.