| Literature DB >> 33892719 |
Oskar Schnappauf1, Liane Heale2, Dilan Dissanayake2, Wanxia L Tsai3, Massimo Gadina3, Thomas L Leto4, Daniel L Kastner5, Harry L Malech4, Douglas B Kuhns6, Ivona Aksentijevich5, Ronald M Laxer2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Biallelic loss-of-function variants in NCF1 lead to reactive oxygen species deficiency and chronic granulomatous disease (CGD). Heterozygosity for the p.Arg90His variant in NCF1 has been associated with susceptibility to systemic lupus erythematosus, rheumatoid arthritis, and Sjögren's syndrome in adult patients. This study demonstrates the association of the homozygous p.Arg90His variant with interferonopathy with features of autoinflammation and autoimmunity in a pediatric patient. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Autoimmunity; Autoinflammation; Interferons; NCF1; Systemic lupus erythematosus
Year: 2021 PMID: 33892719 PMCID: PMC8063424 DOI: 10.1186/s12969-021-00536-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatr Rheumatol Online J ISSN: 1546-0096 Impact factor: 3.054
Fig. 1Patient presentation and NCF1 p.Arg90His genotyping in the proband and her family. a: Atrophic skin lesion on lower abdomen of patient homozygous for NCF1, p.Arg90His. b: Residual oxidase activity of neutrophils and NCF1 expression in patient and healthy control. Left: Residual oxidase activity of neutrophils was determined using dihydrorhodamine (DHR) oxidation by flow cytometry. Right: NCF1 expression in patient and healthy control. NCF1 expression in neutrophils is presented as mean fluorescence intensity. Both panels: Red histograms represent neutrophils treated with buffer under basal conditions; blue histograms represent neutrophils in response to PMA (400 ng/mL). c: Pedigree of the family with the recessively inherited homozygous pathogenic variant p.Arg90His in the NCF1 gene. d: Sanger sequencing validation in proband and family. Sanger sequencing confirmed the homozygous variant NCF1, c.269G > A, p.Arg90His in the patient. Her parents and two brothers are heterozygous for the same variant
Comparison of clinical features of patient with homozygous NCF1, p.Arg90His to pediatric SLE patients
| Disease Features | Pediatric SLE Patientsa | |
|---|---|---|
| Age of disease onset | Average 12 years | 18 months |
| Fever | 35–100% | + |
| Pattern | With active disease | Recurrent episodes |
| Cutaneous Involvement | 60–90% | + |
| Manifestations | Malar rash; photosensitivity; discoid rash; mucosal ulceration | Inflamed linear lesion with atrophic scar |
| Alopecia | 10–30% | + |
| Arthritis | 60–90% | – |
| Neuropsychiatric involvement | 15–95% | + |
| Manifestations | Headaches; cognitive dysfunction; seizures; psychosis | Severe headache with fever |
| Pericarditis | 20–30% | – |
| Pleuritis | 20–30% | – |
| Renal Disease | 48–100% | – |
| Gastrointestinal Disease | 24–40% | + |
| Manifestations | Peritonitis (sterile); abnormal liver function; pancreatitis; colitis | Focal minimal triaditis |
| Hematological disorders | 33–75% | + |
| Manifestations | Anemia; lymphopenia > neutropenia; thrombocytopenia | Chronic anemia; intermittent thrombocytopenia, neutropenia and lymphopenia |
| Inflammatory Markers | ESR correlates with active disease; CRP often normal | ESR elevated disproportionate to CRP with fever |
| Autoantibodies | ||
| ANA | > 99% | + |
| Anti-ds DNA | 84–100% | – |
| Anti-Sm | 23–48% | – |
| Anti-Ro | 38–54% | + |
| Anti-La | 16–32% | + |
SLE systemic lupus erythematosus; ESR erythrocyte sedimentation rate; CRP C-reactive protein; ANA antinuclear antibody; ds double-stranded; Sm Smith
aAdapted from Cassidy JT, Petty RE, Laxer RM, Lindsley CB. Textbook of Pediatric Rheumatology, 6th edition. 2011. Saunders Elsevier; Philadelphia, PA
Fig. 2Interferon signature analysis, inflammatory cytokine profile and immune phenotyping in patient and family. a: Nanostring analysis for IFN signature genes in the patient (Patient-F = sample taken during flare; Patient-NF, SLE patient with the complement C1R deficiency (SLE) and healthy controls (Control 1–4). Red, elevated expression compared to control; blue, reduced expression compared to control. b: Quantitative reverse transcription (qRT-PCR) analysis of 10 IFN-related genes shows strong upregulation in the proband compared to control. Shown is fold change to control normalized to GAPDH expression. c: Quantitative reverse transcription (qRT-PCR) analysis of IL15 in proband and healthy controls. Shown are the relative expression values of IL15/GAPDH. d: IFN-α2, IL-3, TNF-β and nerve growth factor β (NGFβ) cytokine measurement on whole blood cells from the proband, her parents and 2 brothers. Cells were untreated or stimulated with different stimuli (heat-killed Listeria monocytogenes [HKLM] at 107 bacteria/ml, Poly(I:C) at 10 μg/ml, lipopolysaccharide [LPS] at 1 μg/ml, flagellin [FLA] at 50 ng/ml, imiquimod [Imiqu] at 5 μg/ml, ODN2395 [2395] at 5 μM and Staphylococcal Enterotoxin B [SEB] at 1 μg/ml). e: Quantification of pDCs and intermediate monocytes in the proband, her parents and two brothers. PBMCs were extracted from whole blood and incubated with the monoclonal antibodies anti-CD11c and anti-CD123 for pDC analysis and anti-CD14 and anti-CD16 for the analysis of intermediate monocytes. The data shown here are the only comparisons that achieved nominal statistical significance by the Mann-Whitney U test, which would not withstand correction for multiple comparisons