| Literature DB >> 34183838 |
Silvia Vilarinho1,2,3, Richard P Lifton1,4, Bertrand Boisson5,6,7, Laurent Abel5,6,7, Dusan Bogunovic8,9,10,11, Nico Marr12,13, Luigi D Notarangelo14, Stuart G Tangye15,16, Tasuku Honjo17, Philippe Gros18,19, Stéphanie Boisson-Dupuis20,21,22, Jean-Laurent Casanova23,24,25,26, Masato Ogishi27,28, Rui Yang5, Caner Aytekin29, David Langlais30, Mathieu Bourgey31, Taushif Khan12, Fatima Al Ali12, Mahbuba Rahman12, Ottavia M Delmonte14, Maya Chrabieh6,7, Peng Zhang5, Conor Gruber8,9,10,11, Simon J Pelham5, András N Spaan5, Jérémie Rosain6,7, Wei-Te Lei5, Scott Drutman5, Matthew D Hellmann32,33, Margaret K Callahan32,33, Matthew Adamow34,35, Phillip Wong34, Jedd D Wolchok32,33,35,36, Geetha Rao15, Cindy S Ma15,16, Yuka Nakajima17, Tomonori Yaguchi17, Kenji Chamoto17, Samuel C Williams37,38, Jean-Francois Emile39, Flore Rozenberg40, Michael S Glickman41, Franck Rapaport5, Gaspard Kerner6,7, Garrett Allington1,2,3, Ilhan Tezcan42, Deniz Cagdas42, Ferda O Hosnut43, Figen Dogu44, Aydan Ikinciogullari44, V Koneti Rao45, Leena Kainulainen46, Vivien Béziat5,6,7, Jacinta Bustamante5,6,7,47.
Abstract
The pathophysiology of adverse events following programmed cell death protein 1 (PD-1) blockade, including tuberculosis (TB) and autoimmunity, remains poorly characterized. We studied a patient with inherited PD-1 deficiency and TB who died of pulmonary autoimmunity. The patient's leukocytes did not express PD-1 or respond to PD-1-mediated suppression. The patient's lymphocytes produced only small amounts of interferon (IFN)-γ upon mycobacterial stimuli, similarly to patients with inborn errors of IFN-γ production who are vulnerable to TB. This phenotype resulted from a combined depletion of Vδ2+ γδ T, mucosal-associated invariant T and CD56bright natural killer lymphocytes and dysfunction of other T lymphocyte subsets. Moreover, the patient displayed hepatosplenomegaly and an expansion of total, activated and RORγT+ CD4-CD8- double-negative αβ T cells, similar to patients with STAT3 gain-of-function mutations who display lymphoproliferative autoimmunity. This phenotype resulted from excessive amounts of STAT3-activating cytokines interleukin (IL)-6 and IL-23 produced by activated T lymphocytes and monocytes, and the STAT3-dependent expression of RORγT by activated T lymphocytes. Our work highlights the indispensable role of human PD-1 in governing both antimycobacterial immunity and self-tolerance, while identifying potentially actionable molecular targets for the diagnostic and therapeutic management of TB and autoimmunity in patients on PD-1 blockade.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34183838 PMCID: PMC8446316 DOI: 10.1038/s41591-021-01388-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Med ISSN: 1078-8956 Impact factor: 53.440