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A partial form of recessive STAT1 deficiency in humans

Authors :
Guillaume Vogt
Diana Averbuch
Jacinta Bustamante
Julien Lejeune
Dan Engelhard
Jean-Laurent Casanova
Xiao-Fei Kong
Ludovic de Beaucoudrey
Ariane Chapgier
Stéphanie Boisson-Dupuis
Shen-Ying Zhang
Laurent Abel
Jacqueline Feinberg
Eleonore Mayola
Emmanuelle Jouanguy
Source :
Journal of Clinical Investigation. 119:1502-1514
Publication Year :
2009
Publisher :
American Society for Clinical Investigation, 2009.

Abstract

Complete STAT1 deficiency is an autosomal recessive primary immunodeficiency caused by null mutations that abolish STAT1-dependent cellular responses to both IFN-alpha/beta and IFN-gamma. Affected children suffer from lethal intracellular bacterial and viral diseases. Here we report a recessive form of partial STAT1 deficiency, characterized by impaired but not abolished IFN-alpha/beta and IFN-gamma signaling. Two affected siblings suffered from severe but curable intracellular bacterial and viral diseases. Both were homozygous for a missense STAT1 mutation: g.C2086T (P696S). This STAT1 allele impaired the splicing of STAT1 mRNA, probably by disrupting an exonic splice enhancer. The misspliced forms were not translated into a mature protein. The allele was hypofunctional, because residual full-length mRNA production resulted in low but detectable levels of normally functional STAT1 proteins. The P696S amino acid substitution was not detrimental. The patients' cells, therefore, displayed impaired but not abolished responses to both IFN-alpha and IFN-gamma. We also show that recessive STAT1 deficiencies impaired the IL-27 and IFN-lambda1 signaling pathways, possibly contributing to the predisposition to bacterial and viral infections, respectively. Partial recessive STAT1 deficiency is what we believe to be a novel primary immunodeficiency, resulting in impairment of the response to at least 4 cytokines (IFN-alpha/beta, IFN-gamma, IFN-lambda1, and IL-27). It should be considered in patients with unexplained, severe, but curable intracellular bacterial and viral infections.

Details

ISSN :
00219738
Volume :
119
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Clinical Investigation
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....36b8fa77480efa22d0a710472b90d101
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1172/jci37083