| Literature DB >> 31836668 |
Christopher J A Duncan1,2, Benjamin J Thompson3, Rui Chen3, Gillian I Rice4, Florian Gothe3,5, Dan F Young6, Simon C Lovell4, Victoria G Shuttleworth7, Vicky Brocklebank7, Bronte Corner7, Andrew J Skelton3, Vincent Bondet8, Jonathan Coxhead9, Darragh Duffy8, Cecile Fourrage10, John H Livingston11, Julija Pavaine12,13, Edmund Cheesman14, Stephania Bitetti14, Angela Grainger3, Meghan Acres3, Barbara A Innes3, Aneta Mikulasova3, Ruyue Sun7, Rafiqul Hussain8, Ronnie Wright4,15, Robert Wynn16, Mohammed Zarhrate17, Leo A H Zeef18, Katrina Wood19, Stephen M Hughes20, Claire L Harris7, Karin R Engelhardt3, Yanick J Crow21,22,23, Richard E Randall6, David Kavanagh7,24, Sophie Hambleton1,25, Tracy A Briggs26,15.
Abstract
Excessive type I interferon (IFNα/β) activity is implicated in a spectrum of human disease, yet its direct role remains to be conclusively proven. We investigated two siblings with severe early-onset autoinflammatory disease and an elevated IFN signature. Whole-exome sequencing revealed a shared homozygous missense Arg148Trp variant in STAT2, a transcription factor that functions exclusively downstream of innate IFNs. Cells bearing STAT2R148W in homozygosity (but not heterozygosity) were hypersensitive to IFNα/β, which manifest as prolonged Janus kinase-signal transducers and activators of transcription (STAT) signaling and transcriptional activation. We show that this gain of IFN activity results from the failure of mutant STAT2R148W to interact with ubiquitin-specific protease 18, a key STAT2-dependent negative regulator of IFNα/β signaling. These observations reveal an essential in vivo function of STAT2 in the regulation of human IFNα/β signaling, providing concrete evidence of the serious pathological consequences of unrestrained IFNα/β activity and supporting efforts to target this pathway therapeutically in IFN-associated disease.Entities:
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31836668 PMCID: PMC7115903 DOI: 10.1126/sciimmunol.aav7501
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Immunol ISSN: 2470-9468