| Literature DB >> 34249818 |
Nidia Moreno-Corona1,2, Loïc Chentout1,2, Lucie Poggi1,2, Romane Thouenon1,2, Cecile Masson3, Melanie Parisot4, Lou Le Mouel5, Capucine Picard1,6,7, Isabelle André1,2, Marina Cavazzana1,8, Laurence Perrin5, Anne Durandy1,2, Saba Azarnoush5, Sven Kracker1,2.
Abstract
Activated PI3-kinase-δ syndrome 2 (APDS2) is caused by autosomal dominant mutations in the PIK3R1 gene encoding the p85α, p55α, and p50α regulatory subunits. Most diagnosed APDS2 patients carry mutations affecting either the splice donor or splice acceptor sites of exon 11 of the PIK3R1 gene responsible for an alternative splice product and a shortened protein. The clinical presentation of APDS2 patients is highly variable, ranging from mild to profound combined immunodeficiency features as massive lymphoproliferation, increased susceptibility to bacterial and viral infections, bronchiectasis, autoimmune manifestations, and occurrence of cancer. Non-immunological features such as growth retardation and neurodevelopmental delay have been reported for APDS2 patients. Here, we describe a patient suffering from an APDS2 associated with a Smith-Magenis syndrome (SMS), a complex genetic disorder affecting, among others, neurological manifestations and review the literature describing neurodevelopmental impacts in APDS2 and other PIDs/monogenetic disorders associated with dysregulated PI3K signaling.Entities:
Keywords: APDS2; PI3K signaling; PIK3R1; neurodevelopmental impact; primary immunodeficiency
Year: 2021 PMID: 34249818 PMCID: PMC8266209 DOI: 10.3389/fped.2021.688022
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pediatr ISSN: 2296-2360 Impact factor: 3.418
Immunological characteristics of the patient.
| Age at evaluation (years) | 16 | |
| Lymphocytes (/μl) | 2,573 | 1,849–2,788 |
| Natural killer cells (CD16+CD56+) (/μl) | 387 | 70–480 |
| T cells (CD3+) (/μl) | 2,213 | 1,000–2,200 |
| CD4 T cells (/μl) | 515 | 530–1,300 |
| CD8 T cells (/μl) | 1,570 | 330–920 |
| Naive CD4 T cells (CD45RA+/CD4+) (%) | 35 | 58–70 |
| Naive CD4 recent thymic emigrants T cells (CD31+CD45RA+/CD4+) | 19 | 43–55 |
| Naive CD8 T cells (CCR7+CD45RA+CD8+) (%) | 4 | 52–68 |
| Central memory CD8 T cells (CCR7+CD45RA–/CD8+) (%) | 2.5 | 3–4 |
| Effector memory CD8 T cells (CCR7–CD45RA–/CD8+) (%) | 35 | 11–20 |
| Terminal differentiating effector memory CD8 T cells (CCR7–CD45RA+/CD8+) (%) | 58.5 | 16–28 |
| B cells CD19 (/μl) | 48 | 183–628 |
| Transitional B cells (CD24++CD38++/CD19+) (%) | 33 | <11 |
| Age at evaluation (years) | 2 | 16 |
| IgG (g/L) | <0.33 (3.7–15.8) | 10.09 |
| IgA (g/L) | 0.81 (0.3–1.3) | 2.07 (0.8–2.8) |
| IgM (g/L) | 2.73 (0.5–2.2) | 6.14 (0.5–1.9) |
Under Ig replacement; age-matched Ig reference values in brackets.
Figure 1Molecular APDS2 characteristics. (A) Schematic representation of the PIK3R1 gene and illustrated localization of identified mutation. (B) RT-PCR of PIK3R1 mRNA from T-cell blast of a control, a patient with APDS2 (3), and the investigated patient. (C) Schematic representation of mutations affecting splicing of exon 11 annotated in ClinVAR. In red is the mutation of investigated patient. (D) AKT phosphorylation analysis in T-cell blasts (cultured for 13 days) from a healthy control, an APDS2 patient, and the investigated patient. The analysis was performed as described by Deau et al. (3). Mean fluorescence intensity (MFI) is indicated for each sample.
Clinical features of APDS2, SMS, and reported patient.
| Upper respiratory infections | X | X | |
| Chronic otitis | X | X | X |
| Pneumonia | X | X | |
| Sepsis | X | X | |
| Urinary tract infections/pyelonephritis | X | ||
| Lymphadenopathy | X | X | |
| Splenomegaly | X | X | |
| Hepatomegaly | X | X | X |
| Behavioral problems | X | X | X |
| Neurodevelopmental delay | X | X | X |
| Variable mental retardation | X | X | |
| Speech delay | X | X | X |
| Sleep disturbance | X | X | |
| Skeletal/craniofacial | |||
| Short stature | X | X | X |
| Strabismus | X | X | |
| Vascular abnormalities (moyamoya) | X | X | |
| Renal/urinary tract abnormalities | X | X | |
Two reports.
Cases of neurodevelopmental delay in inborn errors of immunity/monogenic deficiencies associated with disturbed class 1A PI3K signaling.
| APDS1 | PIK3CD | AD | Increased | Ig serum level, B and T | 19% of patients in cohort study;global development, speech delay, autism spectrum disorder | ( | |
| APDS2 | PIK3R1 | AD | Increased | Ig serum level, B and T | 31% of patients in cohort study; cognitive impairments, learning disabilities | ( | |
| SHORT syndrome | PIK3R1 | AD | Decreased | N.R. | Behavioral problemsspeech delay | ( | |
| p85α deficiency | PIK3R1 | AR | N.R. | B absent, Ig serum level, | N.R. | ( | |
| P110delta deficiency | PIK3CD | AR | Decreased | B and NK decreased, T impaired Ig serum level, | N.R. | ( | |
| Roifman–Chitayat syndrome | PIK3CD/ | AR | Ig serum level, B and NK decreased, T impaired | Developmental delay; cognitive, speech, and motor retardation,tremor, ataxia | ( | ||
| APDS-L/Cowden syndrome1/macrocephaly/autism syndrome | PTEN | AD | Increased | Ig serum level, B and T | Autism spectrum disorders; developmental delay and macrocephaly | ( |
NK, natural killer; N.R., not reported.