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Selective predisposition to bacterial infections in IRAK-4-deficient children:: IRAK-4-dependent TLRs are otherwise redundant in protective immunity

Authors :
Ku, C-L
von Bernuth, H
Picard, C
Zhang, S-Y
Chang, H-H
Yang, K
Chrabieh, M
Issekutz, AC
Cunningham, CK
Gallin, J
Holland, SM
Roifman, C
Ehl, S
Smart, J
Tang, M
Barrat, FJ
Levy, O
McDonald, D
Day-Good, NK
Miller, R
Takada, H
Hara, T
Al-Hajjar, S
Al-Ghonaium, A
Speert, D
Sanlaville, D
Li, X
Geissmann, F
Vivier, E
Marodi, L
Garty, B-Z
Chapel, H
Rodriguez-Gallego, C
Bossuyt, X
Abel, L
Puel, A
Casanova, J-L
Ku, C-L
von Bernuth, H
Picard, C
Zhang, S-Y
Chang, H-H
Yang, K
Chrabieh, M
Issekutz, AC
Cunningham, CK
Gallin, J
Holland, SM
Roifman, C
Ehl, S
Smart, J
Tang, M
Barrat, FJ
Levy, O
McDonald, D
Day-Good, NK
Miller, R
Takada, H
Hara, T
Al-Hajjar, S
Al-Ghonaium, A
Speert, D
Sanlaville, D
Li, X
Geissmann, F
Vivier, E
Marodi, L
Garty, B-Z
Chapel, H
Rodriguez-Gallego, C
Bossuyt, X
Abel, L
Puel, A
Casanova, J-L
Publication Year :
2007

Abstract

Human interleukin (IL) 1 receptor-associated kinase 4 (IRAK-4) deficiency is a recently discovered primary immunodeficiency that impairs Toll/IL-1R immunity, except for the Toll-like receptor (TLR) 3- and TLR4-interferon (IFN)-alpha/beta pathways. The clinical and immunological phenotype remains largely unknown. We diagnosed up to 28 patients with IRAK-4 deficiency, tested blood TLR responses for individual leukocyte subsets, and TLR responses for multiple cytokines. The patients' peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMCs) did not induce the 11 non-IFN cytokines tested upon activation with TLR agonists other than the nonspecific TLR3 agonist poly(I:C). The patients' individual cell subsets from both myeloid (granulocytes, monocytes, monocyte-derived dendritic cells [MDDCs], myeloid DCs [MDCs], and plasmacytoid DCs) and lymphoid (B, T, and NK cells) lineages did not respond to the TLR agonists that stimulated control cells, with the exception of residual responses to poly(I:C) and lipopolysaccharide in MDCs and MDDCs. Most patients (22 out of 28; 79%) suffered from invasive pneumococcal disease, which was often recurrent (13 out of 22; 59%). Other infections were rare, with the exception of severe staphylococcal disease (9 out of 28; 32%). Almost half of the patients died (12 out of 28; 43%). No death and no invasive infection occurred in patients older than 8 and 14 yr, respectively. The IRAK-4-dependent TLRs and IL-1Rs are therefore vital for childhood immunity to pyogenic bacteria, particularly Streptococcus pneumoniae. Conversely, IRAK-4-dependent human TLRs appear to play a redundant role in protective immunity to most infections, at most limited to childhood immunity to some pyogenic bacteria.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1315700158
Document Type :
Electronic Resource