Gain-of-function human STAT1 mutations impair IL-17 immunity and underlie chronic mucocutaneous candidiasis

نویسندگان

  • Luyan Liu
  • Satoshi Okada
  • Xiao-Fei Kong
  • Alexandra Y. Kreins
  • Sophie Cypowyj
  • Avinash Abhyankar
  • Julie Toubiana
  • Yuval Itan
  • Magali Audry
  • Patrick Nitschke
  • Cécile Masson
  • Beata Toth
  • Jérome Flatot
  • Mélanie Migaud
  • Maya Chrabieh
  • Tatiana Kochetkov
  • Alexandre Bolze
  • Alessandro Borghesi
  • Antoine Toulon
  • Julia Hiller
  • Stefanie Eyerich
  • Kilian Eyerich
  • Vera Gulácsy
  • Ludmyla Chernyshova
  • Viktor Chernyshov
  • Anastasia Bondarenko
  • Rosa María Cortés Grimaldo
  • Lizbeth Blancas-Galicia
  • Ileana Maria Madrigal Beas
  • Joachim Roesler
  • Klaus Magdorf
  • Dan Engelhard
  • Caroline Thumerelle
  • Pierre-Régis Burgel
  • Miriam Hoernes
  • Barbara Drexel
  • Reinhard Seger
  • Theresia Kusuma
  • Annette F. Jansson
  • Julie Sawalle-Belohradsky
  • Bernd Belohradsky
  • Emmanuelle Jouanguy
  • Jacinta Bustamante
  • Mélanie Bué
  • Nathan Karin
  • Gizi Wildbaum
  • Christine Bodemer
  • Olivier Lortholary
  • Alain Fischer
  • Stéphane Blanche
  • Saleh Al-Muhsen
  • Janine Reichenbach
  • Masao Kobayashi
  • Francisco Espinosa Rosales
  • Carlos Torres Lozano
  • Sara Sebnem Kilic
  • Matias Oleastro
  • Amos Etzioni
  • Claudia Traidl-Hoffmann
  • Ellen D. Renner
  • Laurent Abel
  • Capucine Picard
  • László Maródi
  • Stéphanie Boisson-Dupuis
  • Anne Puel
  • Jean-Laurent Casanova
چکیده

Chronic mucocutaneous candidiasis disease (CMCD) may be caused by autosomal dominant (AD) IL-17F deficiency or autosomal recessive (AR) IL-17RA deficiency. Here, using whole-exome sequencing, we identified heterozygous germline mutations in STAT1 in 47 patients from 20 kindreds with AD CMCD. Previously described heterozygous STAT1 mutant alleles are loss-of-function and cause AD predisposition to mycobacterial disease caused by impaired STAT1-dependent cellular responses to IFN-γ. Other loss-of-function STAT1 alleles cause AR predisposition to intracellular bacterial and viral diseases, caused by impaired STAT1-dependent responses to IFN-α/β, IFN-γ, IFN-λ, and IL-27. In contrast, the 12 AD CMCD-inducing STAT1 mutant alleles described here are gain-of-function and increase STAT1-dependent cellular responses to these cytokines, and to cytokines that predominantly activate STAT3, such as IL-6 and IL-21. All of these mutations affect the coiled-coil domain and impair the nuclear dephosphorylation of activated STAT1, accounting for their gain-of-function and dominance. Stronger cellular responses to the STAT1-dependent IL-17 inhibitors IFN-α/β, IFN-γ, and IL-27, and stronger STAT1 activation in response to the STAT3-dependent IL-17 inducers IL-6 and IL-21, hinder the development of T cells producing IL-17A, IL-17F, and IL-22. Gain-of-function STAT1 alleles therefore cause AD CMCD by impairing IL-17 immunity.

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منابع مشابه

New and recurrent gain-of-function STAT1 mutations in patients with chronic mucocutaneous candidiasis from Eastern and Central Europe

BACKGROUND Chronic mucocutaneous candidiasis disease (CMCD) may result from various inborn errors of interleukin (IL)-17-mediated immunity. Twelve of the 13 causal mutations described to date affect the coiled-coil domain (CCD) of STAT1. Several mutations, including R274W in particular, are recurrent, but the underlying mechanism is unclear. OBJECTIVE To investigate and describe nine patients...

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عنوان ژورنال:

دوره 208  شماره 

صفحات  -

تاریخ انتشار 2011