| Literature DB >> 30374066 |
Tenzin Gayden1, Fernando E Sepulveda2, Dong-Anh Khuong-Quang3,4, Jonathan Pratt1, Elvis T Valera1,5, Alexandrine Garrigue2, Susan Kelso6,7, Frank Sicheri6,7, Leonie G Mikael1, Nancy Hamel8, Andrea Bajic1, Rola Dali9, Shriya Deshmukh10, Dzana Dervovic6, Daniel Schramek6,7, Frédéric Guerin2, Mikko Taipale7, Hamid Nikbakht1,9, Jacek Majewski1,11, Despina Moshous12, Janie Charlebois13, Sharon Abish13, Christine Bole-Feysot14, Patrick Nitschke15, Brigitte Bader-Meunier12, David Mitchell13, Catherine Thieblemont16,17, Maxime Battistella17,18, Simon Gravel11, Van-Hung Nguyen19, Rachel Conyers3,4, Jean-Sebastien Diana12, Chris McCormack20,21, H Miles Prince22,23, Marianne Besnard24, Stephane Blanche12, Paul G Ekert3,4, Sylvie Fraitag25, William D Foulkes1,8, Alain Fischer12,26,27, Bénédicte Neven12,27, David Michonneau17,28, Geneviève de Saint Basile29,30, Nada Jabado31,32,33.
Abstract
Subcutaneous panniculitis-like T cell lymphoma (SPTCL), a non-Hodgkin lymphoma, can be associated with hemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis (HLH), a life-threatening immune activation that adversely affects survival1,2. T cell immunoglobulin mucin 3 (TIM-3) is a modulator of immune responses expressed on subgroups of T and innate immune cells. We identify in ~60% of SPTCL cases germline, loss-of-function, missense variants altering highly conserved residues of TIM-3, c.245A>G (p.Tyr82Cys) and c.291A>G (p.Ile97Met), each with specific geographic distribution. The variant encoding p.Tyr82Cys TIM-3 occurs on a potential founder chromosome in patients with East Asian and Polynesian ancestry, while p.Ile97Met TIM-3 occurs in patients with European ancestry. Both variants induce protein misfolding and abrogate TIM-3's plasma membrane expression, leading to persistent immune activation and increased production of inflammatory cytokines, including tumor necrosis factor-α and interleukin-1β, promoting HLH and SPTCL. Our findings highlight HLH-SPTCL as a new genetic entity and identify mutations causing TIM-3 alterations as a causative genetic defect in SPTCL. While HLH-SPTCL patients with mutant TIM-3 benefit from immunomodulation, therapeutic repression of the TIM-3 checkpoint may have adverse consequences.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 30374066 DOI: 10.1038/s41588-018-0251-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Genet ISSN: 1061-4036 Impact factor: 38.330