Omenn syndrome associated with a functional reversion due to a somatic second-site mutation in CARD11 deficiency

S Fuchs, A Rensing-Ehl, U Pannicke… - Blood, The Journal …, 2015 - ashpublications.org
S Fuchs, A Rensing-Ehl, U Pannicke, MR Lorenz, P Fisch, Y Jeelall, J Rohr, C Speckmann
Blood, The Journal of the American Society of Hematology, 2015ashpublications.org
Omenn syndrome (OS) is a severe immunodeficiency associated with erythroderma,
lymphoproliferation, elevated IgE, and hyperactive oligoclonal T cells. A restricted T-cell
repertoire caused by defective thymic T-cell development and selection, lymphopenia with
homeostatic proliferation, and lack of regulatory T cells are considered key factors in OS
pathogenesis. We report 2 siblings presenting with cytomegalovirus (CMV) and
Pneumocystis jirovecii infections and recurrent sepsis; one developed all clinical features of …
Abstract
Omenn syndrome (OS) is a severe immunodeficiency associated with erythroderma, lymphoproliferation, elevated IgE, and hyperactive oligoclonal T cells. A restricted T-cell repertoire caused by defective thymic T-cell development and selection, lymphopenia with homeostatic proliferation, and lack of regulatory T cells are considered key factors in OS pathogenesis. We report 2 siblings presenting with cytomegalovirus (CMV) and Pneumocystis jirovecii infections and recurrent sepsis; one developed all clinical features of OS. Both carried homozygous germline mutations in CARD11 (p.Cys150*), impairing NF-κB signaling and IL-2 production. A somatic second-site mutation reverting the stop codon to a missense mutation (p.Cys150Leu) was detected in tissue-infiltrating T cells of the OS patient. Expression of p.Cys150Leu in CARD11-deficient T cells largely reconstituted NF-κB signaling. The reversion likely occurred in a prethymic T-cell precursor, leading to a chimeric T-cell repertoire. We speculate that in our patient the functional advantage of the revertant T cells in the context of persistent CMV infection, combined with lack of regulatory T cells, may have been sufficient to favor OS. This first observation of OS in a patient with a T-cell activation defect suggests that severely defective T-cell development or homeostatic proliferation in a lymphopenic environment are not required for this severe immunopathology.
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