| Literature DB >> 35091979 |
Hassan Abolhassani1,2, Nils Landegren3,4, Paul Bastard5,6,7, Marie Materna6,7, Mohammadreza Modaresi8, Likun Du1, Maribel Aranda-Guillén3, Fabian Sardh3,4, Fanglei Zuo1, Peng Zhang5, Harold Marcotte9, Nico Marr10,11, Taushif Khan10, Manar Ata10, Fatima Al-Ali10, Remi Pescarmona12,13, Alexandre Belot12,14,15, Vivien Béziat6,7, Qian Zhang5,6, Jean-Laurent Casanova5,6,7,16, Olle Kämpe4,17, Shen-Ying Zhang5,6,7, Lennart Hammarström1, Qiang Pan-Hammarström18.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Inborn errors of immunity (IEI) and autoantibodies to type I interferons (IFNs) underlie critical COVID-19 pneumonia in at least 15% of the patients, while the causes of multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C) remain elusive.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; IFNAR1; critical pneumonia; inborn errors of immunity (IEI); multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C); primary immunodeficiency (PID)
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35091979 PMCID: PMC8798309 DOI: 10.1007/s10875-022-01215-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Clin Immunol ISSN: 0271-9142 Impact factor: 8.542
Fig. 1Clinical and genetic evaluation of a patient with IFNAR1 deficiency associated with both critical COVID-19 pneumonia and MIS-C. Panel A shows the pedigree of the index patient; Panel B shows computed tomography (CT) scan revealing right sinus affected by mucormycosis at age 2; Panel C shows chest CT scan day 8 after the onset of the disease, with ground-glass opacification and dense consolidation on air bronchograms; Panel D shows chronological clinical complications in a patient; Panel E depicts a schematic illustration of the localization of the large deletion identified in this report and mutations identified in previously reported cases with IFNAR1 deficiency. IEI inborn errors of immunity. Panels F–G represent the confirmation of large deletion in the index patient by integrative genomics viewer of the whole-exome sequencing, PCR, and Sanger sequencing
Immunologic profile of a patient with both critical COVID-19 pneumonia and MIS-C
| Parameter | Before SARS-CoV-2 infection (2 years) | After SARS-CoV-2 infection (3 years) | Normal range |
|---|---|---|---|
| IgG (mg/dL) | 1490 | 1604 | 700–1600 |
| IgA (mg/dL) | 220 | 185 | 19–220 |
| IgM (mg/dL) | 270 | 130 | 55–210 |
| Hemoglobin (g/dL) | 11.0 | 10.3 | 11.5–15.5 |
| Platelets (cell × 109/L) | 250 | 548 | 200–500 |
| WBC (cell/μL) | 14,200 | 14,700 | 5000–15,000 |
| Monocytes (cell/μL) | 420 | 470 | 200–1000 |
| Lymphocytes (cell/μL) | 5680 | 5320 | 2000–10,000 |
| CD3+ T cells (%) | 60 | 64 | 30–78 |
| CD4+ T helper cells (%) | 40 | 42 | 22–58 |
| CD8+ T cytotoxic cells (%) | 18 | 20 | 10–37 |
| CD19 + B cells (%) | 23 | 21 | 3–14 |
| NBT test (%) | 100% | NI | 90–100 |
| Lymphocyte transformation test | Normal | Normal | Normal |
| C3 (mg/dL) | 105 | 175 | 90–180 |
| C4 (mg/dL) | 20 | 36 | 15–40 |
| CH50 (%) | 91 | 95 | 75–125 |
| HIV DNA PCR | Negative | NI | Negative |
| ALT (U/L) | 32 | 158 | 0–40 |
| AST (U/L) | 28 | 163 | 0–40 |
| GGT (U/L) | NI | 76 | 0–20 |
| CRP (mg/L) | 15 | 229 | 0–14 |
| ESR (mm/h) | 21 | 29 | 0–15 |
| Ferritin (ng/mL) | NI | 198 | 10–140 |
| CK (U/L) | 53 | 5320 | 40–200 |
| cTnI (ng/mL) | NI | 0.82 | 0–0.5 |
| D-dimers (mg/L) | NI | 1.1 | 0.5–2.0 |
WBC white blood cells, ALT alanine aminotransferase, AST aspartate transaminase, CRP C-reactive protein test, CK creatine kinase, cTnI cardiac troponin I, GGT gamma- glutamyl transferase, NBT nitro blue tetrazolium, NI not indicated, CH50 50% haemolytic complement activity, ESR erythrocyte sedimentation rate
Fig. 2The patient’s IFNAR1 variant (H263fs*) is not expressed at the cell surface and is a loss-of-function variant. Overexpression experiments that were performed in HEK293T cells showed normal mRNA expression except when using a probe spanning exons 6–7 (Panel A), and truncated protein expression detected by western blotting (WB, Panel B) and a very low level of cell surface IFNAR1 expression by fluorescence-activated cell sorting (FACS, Panel C) in the H263fs*mutant compared to the wild type (WT) protein. Panel D depicts IFN-sensitive response element (ISRE) activity induction upon stimulations with IFN-α2, IFN-ω, or IFN-β in IFNAR1−/− cells where different WT or mutant IFNAR1 plasmids were transiently transfected and the H263fs* mutant does rescue the response in contrast to the WT variant. NT nontransfected cell lines, EV empty vector, MFI mean fluorescent intensity, KO knockout
Summary of reported patients with IFNAR1 deficiency
| Gender | Age | Mortality | Inheritance | Zygosity | mRNA change | Amino acid change | Natural viral infection | Vaccine side effects | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Male | 9 years | - | AR | Hom | c.674–2 A > G | p.V225fs* | - | MMR | Hernandez et al |
| Female | 12 years | - | AR | Comp Het | c.674–1 G > A | p.V225fs* | - | YFV | Hernandez et al |
| c.783 G > A | p.W261* | ||||||||
| Female | 6 months | Dead | AR | Hom | Large del exon 11 | p.Y481fs* | HSV | * | Bastard et al |
| Male | 13 months | - | AR | Hom | Large del exon 11 | p.Y481fs* | ** | - | Bastard et al |
| Male | 15 months | Dead | AR | Hom | c.992 C > T | p.Q308* | EBV | MMR | Gothe et al |
| Male | 2 months | - | AR | Hom | c.1671_1821 del | p.*557E ext46 | CMV | - | Hoyos-Bachiloglu et al |
| Male | 38 years | - | AR | Hom | c.219 G > C | p.W73C | COVID-19 | - | Zhang et al |
| Male | 26 years | - | AR | Hom | c.1264 A > G | p.S422R | COVID-19 | - | Zhang et al |
| Male | 13 years | - | AR | Hom | c.674-2A > G | p.V225fs* | COVID-19, influenza | MMR | Khanmohammadi et al |
| Female | 23 years | - | AD | Het | c.1000 delCCT | p.P335del | COVID-19 | - | Zhang et al |
| Female | 3 years | Dead | AR | Hom | Large del exons 7–8 | p.H263fs* | COVID-19 | - | This study |
AR autosomal recessive, AD autosomal dominant, Hom homozygous, Het heterozygous, Comp Het compound heterozygous, MMR measles, mumps, and rubella vaccine, YFV yellow fever vaccine, HSV herpes virus infection, EBV Epstein-Barr virus, CMV cytomegalovirus
The patient had one night of fever after MMR vaccine and atypical Kawasaki disease, without typical cardiac involvement
Viral serological data showed him to be positive for antibodies against mumps, HSV-1, human herpes viruses 4, 5, and 6, rhinovirus, adenovirus, enterovirus B, varicella zoster virus (VZV), cytomegalovirus, EBV, measles virus, mumps virus, hepatitis A virus, influenza A virus, and respiratory syncytial virus