| Literature DB >> 29106381 |
Rodrigo Hoyos-Bachiloglu1, Janet Chou1, Catherine N Sodroski2, Abdallah Beano1, Wayne Bainter1, Magdalena Angelova2, Eman Al Idrissi3, Murad K Habazi3, Hamza Ali Alghamdi3, Fahd Almanjomi3, Mohamed Al Shehri3, Nagi Elsidig3, Morsi Alaa Eldin3, David M Knipe2, Mofareh AlZahrani3, Raif S Geha1.
Abstract
Primary immunodeficiencies are often monogenic disorders characterized by vulnerability to specific infectious pathogens. Here, we performed whole-exome sequencing of a patient with disseminated Mycobacterium abscessus, Streptococcus viridians bacteremia, and cytomegalovirus (CMV) viremia and identified mutations in 2 genes that regulate distinct IFN pathways. The patient had a homozygous frameshift deletion in IFNGR2, which encodes the signal transducing chain of the IFN-γ receptor, that resulted in minimal protein expression and abolished downstream signaling. The patient also harbored a homozygous deletion in IFNAR1 (IFNAR1*557Gluext*46), which encodes the IFN-α receptor signaling subunit. The IFNAR1*557Gluext*46 resulted in replacement of the stop codon with 46 additional codons at the C-terminus. The level of IFNAR1*557Gluext*46 mutant protein expressed in patient fibroblasts was comparable to levels of WT IFNAR1 in control fibroblasts. IFN-α-induced signaling was impaired in the patient fibroblasts, as evidenced by decreased STAT1/STAT2 phosphorylation, nuclear translocation of STAT1, and expression of IFN-α-stimulated genes critical for CMV immunity. Pretreatment with IFN-α failed to suppress CMV protein expression in patient fibroblasts, whereas expression of WT IFNAR1 restored IFN-α-mediated suppression of CMV. This study identifies a human IFNAR1 mutation and describes a digenic immunodeficiency specific to type I and type II IFNs.Entities:
Keywords: Immunology; Innate immunity; Virology
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29106381 PMCID: PMC5707159 DOI: 10.1172/JCI93486
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Invest ISSN: 0021-9738 Impact factor: 14.808