| Literature DB >> 28848550 |
Paul Edgar Gray1, Bella Shadur1, Susan Russell2, Richard Mitchell2, Michael Buckley3, Kerri Gallagher4, Ian Andrews5, Kevin Thia6, Joseph A Trapani6, Edwin Philip Kirk7, Ilia Voskoboinik8.
Abstract
Bi-allelic null mutations affecting UNC13D, STXBP2, or STX11 result in defects of lymphocyte cytotoxic degranulation and commonly cause familial hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (FHL) in early life. Patients with partial loss of function are increasingly being diagnosed after presenting with alternative features of this disease, or with HLH later in life. Here, we studied two sisters with lymphocyte degranulation defects secondary to compound heterozygote missense variants in UNC13D. The older sibling presented aged 11 with linear growth arrest and delayed puberty, 2 years prior to developing transient ischemic attacks secondary to neuroinflammation and hypogammaglobulinemia, but no FHL symptoms. Her geno-identical younger sister was initially asymptomatic but then presented at the same age with severe EBV-driven infectious mononucleosis, which was treated aggressively and did not progress to HLH. The sisters had similar natural killer cell degranulation; however, while cytotoxic activity was moderately reduced in the asymptomatic patient, it was completely absent in both siblings during active disease. Following allogeneic bone marrow transplantation at the age of 15, the older child has completely recovered NK cell cytotoxicity, is asymptomatic, and has experienced an exceptional compensatory growth spurt. Her younger sister was also successfully transplanted and is currently disease free. The current study reveals previously unappreciated manifestations of FHL in patients who inherited hypomorphic gene variants and also raises the important question of whether a threshold of minimum NK function can be defined that should protect a patient from serious disease manifestations such as HLH.Entities:
Keywords: HLH; cytotoxic lymphocytes; hematology; immunodeficiency; pathology
Year: 2017 PMID: 28848550 PMCID: PMC5552658 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2017.00944
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Figure 1Patient 1 prior to bone marrow transplantation (BMT). (A) Patient 1 suffered growth arrest between the ages of 11 and 15. Following BMT, the patient has grown by over 8 cm. (B) Bi-allelic mutations in UNC13D result in impaired CD107a degranulation (on the left) and NK cell cytotoxicity using a standard 4-h 51Cr release assay (on the right). Histogram on the bottom right shows CD107a+ NK cells from quadrants labeled with “*”. In the 51Cr release assay, E/T ratio was calculated based on %NK cells (CD3−CD16+CD56+) in peripheral blood mononucleated cell (PBMC). “Historical controls” include seven unrelated healthy donors assessed at different times over a period of 2 years. “Control” is a healthy donor who provided the blood at the same time as the patients. Freshly isolated PBMCs were cultured overnight in 100 U/mL IL2.
In silico prediction analysis of UNC13D mutations.
| c.[1240C>T] p.Arg414Cys | c.[2753C>A] p.Ala918Asp | |
|---|---|---|
| Previous clinical reports | HLH in homozygous state | None |
| gnomAD allele frequency | 1 in 245878 | Not previously reported |
| Evolutionary conservation | Highly conserved, including | Highly conserved, including |
| SIFT | Damaging | Damaging |
| MutationTaster | Disease causing | Disease causing |
| Provean | Damaging (−7.47) | Damaging (−3.93) |
| CADD | 32 (0.06%) | 14.5 |
Figure 2Patient 1 NK cell cytotoxicity and degranulation show a complete recovery after bone marrow transplantation; NK cell cytotoxicity and degranulation are severely impaired in Patient 2 after a severe EBV-driven mononucleosis. Shown are (A) degranulation assays and (B) 4-h 51Cr release assays. “Donor” is a sibling of Patients 1 and 2, who carries a mono-allelic UNC13D mutation; “Control” is a healthy donor who provided the blood at the same time as Patients 1 and 2; “Historical controls” are from 16 healthy donors, including those shown in Figure 1B. PBMCs were incubated overnight without (−IL2) or with 100 U/mL IL2 (+IL2).