| Literature DB >> 31440277 |
Zahra Shahbazi1, Nima Parvaneh2, Shirin Shahbazi3, Hamzeh Rahimi1, Mohammad Hamid1, Davoud Shahbazi4, Samaneh Delavari2, Hassan Abolhassani2,5, Asghar Aghamohammadi2,6, Reza Mahdian1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The lymphohematopoietic cells originating from feto-maternal trafficking during pregnancy may cause microchimerism and lead to materno-fetal graft versus host disease (GVHD) in severe combined immunodeficiency (SCID) patients. However, definitive diagnosis between GVHD and Omenn's syndrome is often difficult based on clinical and immunological phenotypes particularly in the patients with hypomorphic mutations. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Graft versus host disease; JAK3 deficiency; Microchimerism; Severe combined immunodeficiency; Short Tandem Repeat
Year: 2019 PMID: 31440277 PMCID: PMC6704686 DOI: 10.1186/s13223-019-0361-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Allergy Asthma Clin Immunol ISSN: 1710-1484 Impact factor: 3.406
Fig. 1The diagram of JAK3 protein and mutations previously reported in its 7 JH domains. The mutation found in the current study is shown in a box fall into JH2 domain
Fig. 2Skin biopsy of the patient show acanthosis and moderate to severe lymphocytic and histiocytic infiltration in upper and also hypodermis with vague granulomatous formation. Also granulation inflammation with presence of acid fast bacilli is visible (Ziehl–Neelsen staining)
Differential frequency of Lymphocytes and serum levels of immunoglobulins in the patient
| Parameters | Patient | Normal rangea |
|---|---|---|
| WCB (cell*103/µL) | 10.3b | 5–17 |
| Eosinophils % (count, cell/mL) | 8.2 (851)b | 0–1 |
| Platelets, count, cells*109/L | 325b | 150–400 |
| Hemoglobin, g/dL | 10.4b | 11.5–14.0 |
| Lymphocyte % (count, cell/mL) | 78.7 (8169)b | 50–70 |
| CD3% (count, cell/mL) | 93.5 (7643)b | 56–75 |
| CD4% (count, cell/mL) | 86.4 (7063)b | 28–47 |
| CD4+ CD45RA+ CD45RO− (naïve) % of helper T cells | 59 | 11–53 |
| CD4+ CD45RA-CD45RO+ (memory) % of helper T cells | 28 | 31–74 |
| CD4+ HLA-DR+ CD38− (activated) % of helper T cells | 3 | 2–11 |
| CD8% (count, cell/mL) | 4.6 (382)b | 16–30 |
| CD8+ CD45RA+ CD45RO− (naïve) % of cytotoxic T cells | 75 | 27–69 |
| CD8+ CD45RA-CD45RO+ (memory) % of cytotoxic T cells | 15 | 12–50 |
| CD8+ HLA-DR+ CD38− (activated) % of % of cytotoxic T cells | 2 | 2–22 |
| CD16% (count, cell/mL) | 4.2 (343.1)b | 4–17 |
| CD19% (count, cell/mL) | 4.05 (331)b | 14–33 |
| Lymphocyte proliferation responses to PHA | 1.5 | > 0.3 |
| Quantitative CD4+ PHA response (c/µL) | 120b | 170–3499 |
| Quantitative CD8+ PHA response (c/µL) | 25b | 76–3640 |
| IgG (mg/dL) | 332b | 295–1156 |
| IgA (mg/dL) | 5b | 27–246 |
| IgM (mg/dL) | 87b | 37–184 |
| Anti-tetanus (IU/mL) | 0.05b | > 0.1 |
| Anti-diphtheria (IU/mL) | 0.01b | > 0.1 |
| TRECs | 10c | 23–67 |
TRECs T-cell receptor excision circles, PHA phytohemagglutinin
aThe normal range of these quantities is derived from the http://www.palms.com.au
b Measured at age 10 months
cMeasured at age 3 years
Fig. 3a JAK3 gene Sanger sequencing result for the proband (A) shows homozygous genotype for mutant T allele, patient’s father (B) and her mother (C) are heterozygous, and a normal person (D) that is homozygous for wild type C allele. b Sanger sequencing result of the plasmids containing different JAK3 gene alleles, (A) Wild type C allele, (B) Mutant T allele
Fig. 4Correlating Combined Annotation Dependent Depletion (CADD) scores with minor allele frequencies (MAF) for pathogenic JAK3 mutations in the proband and other variants (missense mutations, splice acceptor mutations, splice donor mutations, start losses and frameshift mutations) reported in the population databases (ExAC: http://exac.broadinstitute.org, n = 60,706 exomes and gnomAD: http://gnomad.broadinstitute.org, n = 123,136 exomes and 15,496 genomes). MSC mutation significance cutoff
Interpretation scores for the pathogenicity of p.R775H variant in JAK3 gene (neu: neutral; del: deleterious)
| Software name | Predict SNP | PhD-SNP | Polyphen-1 | Polyphen-2 | SIFT | SNAP | Mutation taster prediction | Pathogenicity (ACMG) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Score/prediction | 72% del | 61% del | 74% del | 81% del | 79% del | 72% del | Disease causing | Likely Pathogenic |
Fig. 5QF-PCR results for trisomy STR-marker indicating the presence of three different haplotypes for the investigated STR markers in the patient’s blood cells. In a normal person, for each of the STR markers shown in the figure, two peaks with an almost equal size (for two alleles in heterozygote genotype) or a single long peak (for one allele in homozygote genotype) are expected. In our patient as show with star sign (*), some of the markers have a short extra peak that is the maternal allele exists in maternal T cells but did not inherit to the child during fertilization. Moreover a skewed allele ratio due to the presence of the maternal allele that is common between mother and child is seen. This allele leads to an increase of the length of one of the binary peaks. These two finding suggest the presence of two maternal alleles in a low dosage. We have calculated the allele dosage ratios by dividing the larger peak area to the smaller one. There are no four-allele results. Fragment size is in bp on horizontal line, arbitrary fluorescence units shown on vertical axis. Alleles labeled according to the marker name