作者
Jahnavi Aluri,Alicia Bach,Saara Kaviany,Luana Chiquetto Paracatu,Maleewan Kitcharoensakkul,Magdalena Walkiewicz,Christopher D. Putnam,Marwan Shinawi,Nermina Saucier,Elise Rizzi,Michael T. Harmon,Molly P. Keppel,Michelle R. Ritter,Morgan Similuk,Elaine Kulm,Michael Joyce,Adriana Almeida de Jesús,Raphaela Goldbach‐Mansky,Yi-Shan Lee,Marina Cella,Peggy L. Kendall,Mary C. Dinauer,Jeffrey J. Bednarski,Christina J. Bemrich-Stolz,Scott Canna,Shirley Abraham,Matthew M. Demczko,Jonathan Powell,Stacie M. Jones,Amy M. Scurlock,Suk See De Ravin,Jack J. Bleesing,James Connelly,V. Koneti Rao,Laura G. Schuettpelz,Megan A. Cooper
摘要
Inborn errors of immunity (IEI) are a genetically heterogeneous group of disorders with a broad clinical spectrum. Identification of molecular and functional bases of these disorders is important for diagnosis, treatment, and an understanding of the human immune response. We identified 6 unrelated males with neutropenia, infections, lymphoproliferation, humoral immune defects, and in some cases bone marrow failure associated with 3 different variants in the X-linked gene TLR8, encoding the endosomal Toll-like receptor 8 (TLR8). Interestingly, 5 patients had somatic variants in TLR8 with <30% mosaicism, suggesting a dominant mechanism responsible for the clinical phenotype. Mosaicism was also detected in skin-derived fibroblasts in 3 patients, demonstrating that mutations were not limited to the hematopoietic compartment. All patients had refractory chronic neutropenia, and 3 patients underwent allogeneic hematopoietic cell transplantation. All variants conferred gain of function to TLR8 protein, and immune phenotyping demonstrated a proinflammatory phenotype with activated T cells and elevated serum cytokines associated with impaired B-cell maturation. Differentiation of myeloid cells from patient-derived induced pluripotent stem cells demonstrated increased responsiveness to TLR8. Together, these findings demonstrate that gain-of-function variants in TLR8 lead to a novel childhood-onset IEI with lymphoproliferation, neutropenia, infectious susceptibility, B- and T-cell defects, and in some cases, bone marrow failure. Somatic mosaicism is a prominent molecular mechanism of this new disease.