5 research outputs found

    Immunodeficiency, autoimmunity, and increased risk of B cell malignancy in humans with TRAF3 mutations.

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    Tumor necrosis factor receptor-associated factor 3 (TRAF3) is a central regulator of immunity. TRAF3 is often somatically mutated in B cell malignancies, but its role in human immunity is not defined. Here, in five unrelated families, we describe an immune dysregulation syndrome of recurrent bacterial infections, autoimmunity, systemic inflammation, B cell lymphoproliferation, and hypergammaglobulinemia. Affected individuals each had monoallelic mutations in TRAF3 that reduced TRAF3 expression. Immunophenotyping showed that patients' B cells were dysregulated, exhibiting increased nuclear factor-κB 2 activation, elevated mitochondrial respiration, and heightened inflammatory responses. Patients had mild CD4+ T cell lymphopenia, with a reduced proportion of naïve T cells but increased regulatory T cells and circulating T follicular helper cells. Guided by this clinical phenotype, targeted analyses demonstrated that common genetic variants, which also reduce TRAF3 expression, are associated with an increased risk of B cell malignancies, systemic lupus erythematosus, higher immunoglobulin levels, and bacterial infections in the wider population. Reduced TRAF3 conveys disease risks by driving B cell hyperactivity via intrinsic activation of multiple intracellular proinflammatory pathways and increased mitochondrial respiration, with a likely contribution from dysregulated T cell help. Thus, we define monogenic TRAF3 haploinsufficiency syndrome and demonstrate how common TRAF3 variants affect a range of human diseases

    Primary immunodeficiency diseases: Genomic approaches delineate heterogeneous Mendelian disorders

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    BACKGROUND: Primary immunodeficiency diseases (PIDDs) are clinically and genetically heterogeneous disorders thus far associated with mutations in more than 300 genes. The clinical phenotypes derived from distinct genotypes may overlap. Genetic etiology can be a prognostic indicator of disease severity and can influence treatment decisions. OBJECTIVE: To investigate the ability of whole-exome screening methods to detect disease-causing variants in individuals with PIDDs. METHODS: Individuals with PIDDs from 278 families from 22 countries were investigated using whole-exome sequencing (WES). Computational CNV prediction pipelines and an exome-tiling chromosomal microarray were also applied to identify intragenic copy number variants (CNVs). Analytic approaches initially focused on 475 known or candidate PIDD genes, but were non-exclusive and were further tailored based upon clinical data, family history and immunophenotyping. RESULTS: A likely molecular diagnosis was achieved in 110 (40%) unrelated probands. Clinical diagnosis was revised in about half (60/110) and management was directly altered in nearly a quarter (26/110) of families based on the molecular findings. Twelve PIDD-causing CNVs were detected, including seven smaller than 30 Kb that would not have been detected with conventional diagnostic CNV arrays. CONCLUSION: This high-throughput genomic approach enabled detection of disease-related variants in unexpected genes, permitted detection of low-grade constitutional, somatic and revertant mosaicism, and provided evidence of a mutational burden in mixed PIDD immunophenotypes

    Primary immunodeficiency diseases: Genomic approaches delineate heterogeneous Mendelian disorders

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    Emerging Infections and Pertinent Infections Related to Travel for Patients with Primary Immunodeficiencies

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