| Literature DB >> 33066778 |
Alice S Chau1,2, Bonnie L Cole3,4, Jason S Debley2,5, Kabita Nanda5, Aaron B I Rosen2, Michael J Bamshad4,5,6, Deborah A Nickerson4,6, Troy R Torgerson7, Eric J Allenspach8,9,10.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Heme oxygenase-1 (HMOX1) catalyzes the metabolism of heme into carbon monoxide, ferrous iron, and biliverdin. Through biliverdin reductase, biliverdin becomes bilirubin. HMOX1-deficiency is a rare autosomal recessive disorder with hallmark features of direct antibody negative hemolytic anemia with normal bilirubin, hyperinflammation and features similar to macrophage activation syndrome. Clinical findings have included asplenia, nephritis, hepatitis, and vasculitis. Pulmonary features and evaluation of the immune response have been limited. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Asplenia; HMOX1; HO-1; Heme oxygenase-1; Hemophagocytosis lymphohistiocytosis; Macrophage activation syndrome; NSIP; Systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis; Vasculitis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33066778 PMCID: PMC7565350 DOI: 10.1186/s12969-020-00474-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Rheumatol Online J ISSN: 1546-0096 Impact factor: 3.413
Fig. 1Hematologic values at baseline and during flares. a Clinical timeline with major events (above) and infections (below). The flares duration is indicated in shaded box. b Trends of patient’s laboratory values for white blood count (WBC), platelets (Plts), and hematocrit (Hct) over the clinical course. Age-specific reference values are noted in grey shaded in between the upper and lower limits of normal (dotted lines). The timeline shown in years is broken into early childhood (0-4 years) and then two flare episodes with numerous values to compare (4.5–5 years and 9.5-10 years). Known events immediately preceding flares are indicated (arrows)
Laboratory studies. Patient laboratory values are displayed for the patient for the ranges from hospitalizations at our institution with the normal value ranges for each indicated test listed
| Test | Normal Values | Patient’s Values |
|---|---|---|
| ALT | 5–41 IU/L | 165–615 |
| AST | 6–40 IU/L | 44–157 |
| GGT | 15–85 IU/L | 30–405 |
| Total bilirubin | 0.0–1.1 mg/dL | 0.2 |
| INR | < 1.0 | 1.2–1.6 |
| Fibrinogen | 230–450 mg/dL | 57–493 |
| D-dimer | ≤0.5 mg FEU/mL | > 20 |
| Ceruloplasmin | 29–56 mg/dL | 48 |
| Liver copper | 10–35 μg/g dry weight | 43 |
| Plasma copper | 56–191 mcg/dL | 191 |
| Triglycerides | 60–135 mg/dL | 95–503 |
| LDL | < 110 mg/dL | 324 |
| HDL | > 39 mg/dL | 58 |
| Total LDH | 145–345 U/L | 5490–28,019 |
| LDH 1 (%) | 17.5–28.3% (I, Heart) | 7.5–10 |
| LDH 2 (%) | 30.4–36.4% (II) | 17.6–21 |
| LDH 3 (%) | 19.2–24.8% (III) | 26.9 |
| LDH 4 (%) | 9.6–15.6% (IV) | 23.7 |
| LDH 5 (%) | 5.5–12.7% (V, Liver) | 24.3 |
| Ferritin | 10–300 ng/mL | 555–4264 |
| sIL-2R | 45–1105 U/mL | 145 |
| IgG | 608–1572 mg/dL | 1050–1140 |
| IgA | 52–242 mg/dL | 261 |
| IgM | 45–236 mg/dL | 89–108 |
| IgE | 0.98–570.6 mg/dL | 105 |
| IgD | ≤10 mg/dL | 3 |
| PPSV23 (PCV13) | ≥8/21 (≥5/12) | 8/21 (5/12) |
| Tetanus | ≥0.01 IU/mL | 0.43 |
| C3 | 83–203 mg/dL | 186 |
| C4 | 16–52 mg/dL | 24 |
| CH50 | > 32 unit/mL | 69 |
| CD3 | 1200-2600/mm3 | 6086; 1465 |
| CD4 | 650–1500/mm3 | 3793; 786 |
| CD8 | 370–1100/mm3 | 2117; 661 |
| CD4:CD8 | > 2:1 | 1:8:1; 1.2:1 |
| CD16+CD56+ | 120–480/mm3 | 882; 89 |
| CD19 | 270–860/mm3 | 1588; 232 |
| PHA | > 30% | 24.70% |
| anti-CD3 | > 30% | 21.50% |
| NK function | ||
| 50:1 | > 20 | 11 |
| 25:1 | > 10 | 9 |
| 12.5:1 | > 5 | 5 |
| 6.25:1 | > 1 | 5 |
| Lytic units | > 3.1 | 2.5 |
Abbreviations: ALT Alanine aminotransferase, AST Aspartate aminotransferase, CH50 Total hemolytic complement activity, GGT γ-glutamyl transferase, HDL High density lipoprotein, IgA Immunoglobulin A, IgD Immunoglobulin D, IgG Immunoglobulin G, IgM Immunoglobulin M, INR International normalized ratio, LDH Lactate dehydrogenase, LDL Low density lipoprotein, NK Natural killer cell, PHA Phytohemagglutinin, PPSV23 Pneumococcal vaccine polyvalent, sIL-2R Soluble interleukin-2 receptor
Fig. 2Histopathology demonstrating unique features of HMOX1 deficiency. a Trichrome stained sections from lung biopsy tissue demonstrate extensive alveolar septal fibrosis and scattered granulomas. b Iron staining of lung tissue highlights hemosiderin laden macrophages (blue granules) associated with cholesterol granulomas. c Trichrome stained liver biopsy with mild sinusoidsal fibrosis and microvesicular steatosis and (d) iron stained liver biopsy with increased iron (blue granules) in Kupffer cells (blue). e Wright stained bone marrow aspirate demonstrating hemophagocytosis. f Peripheral blood smear demonstrating anisocytosis, schistocytes, elliptocytes, and a Howell-Jolly body
Fig. 3Patient cells lacked HMOX protein expression. Representative western blot analysis of HMOX1 following induction with cobalt protoporphyrin (CoPP) for 24 h of patient’s peripheral blood mononuclear cells compared to control cells. Patient is demonstrated to lack expression of HMOX1