| Literature DB >> 28783042 |
Benson Ogunjimi1,2,3,4,5, Shen-Ying Zhang6,7,8, Katrine B Sørensen9,10,11, Kristian A Skipper10,11, Madalina Carter-Timofte9,11, Gaspard Kerner7,8, Stefanie Luecke10,11, Thaneas Prabakaran10,11, Yujia Cai10,11, Josephina Meester12, Esther Bartholomeus12, Nikhita Ajit Bolar12, Geert Vandeweyer12, Charlotte Claes12, Yasmine Sillis12, Lazaro Lorenzo6,7,8, Raffaele A Fiorenza6,7,8, Soraya Boucherit6,7,8, Charlotte Dielman13, Steven Heynderickx4, George Elias4, Andrea Kurotova14, Ann Vander Auwera15, Lieve Verstraete16, Lieven Lagae17, Helene Verhelst18, Anna Jansen19,20, Jose Ramet2, Arvid Suls12, Evelien Smits4, Berten Ceulemans21, Lut Van Laer12, Genevieve Plat Wilson22, Jonas Kreth23, Capucine Picard7,8, Horst Von Bernuth24, Joël Fluss25, Stephane Chabrier26, Laurent Abel6,7,8, Geert Mortier12, Sebastien Fribourg27, Jacob Giehm Mikkelsen10,11, Jean-Laurent Casanova6,7,8,28,29, Søren R Paludan10,11, Trine H Mogensen9,10,11.
Abstract
Varicella zoster virus (VZV) typically causes chickenpox upon primary infection. In rare cases, VZV can give rise to life-threatening disease in otherwise healthy people, but the immunological basis for this remains unexplained. We report 4 cases of acute severe VZV infection affecting the central nervous system or the lungs in unrelated, otherwise healthy children who are heterozygous for rare missense mutations in POLR3A (one patient), POLR3C (one patient), or both (two patients). POLR3A and POLR3C encode subunits of RNA polymerase III. Leukocytes from all 4 patients tested exhibited poor IFN induction in response to synthetic or VZV-derived DNA. Moreover, leukocytes from 3 of the patients displayed defective IFN production upon VZV infection and reduced control of VZV replication. These phenotypes were rescued by transduction with relevant WT alleles. This work demonstrates that monogenic or digenic POLR3A and POLR3C deficiencies confer increased susceptibility to severe VZV disease in otherwise healthy children, providing evidence for an essential role of a DNA sensor in human immunity.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28783042 PMCID: PMC5669568 DOI: 10.1172/JCI92280
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Invest ISSN: 0021-9738 Impact factor: 14.808