Human inborn errors of IFN-gamma immunity underlie mycobacterial diseases. We describe patients with Mycobacterium bovis (BCG) disease who are homozygous for loss-of-function mutations of SPPL2A. This gene encodes a transmembrane protease that degrades the N-terminal fragment (NTF) of CD74 (HLA invariant chain) in antigen-presenting cells. The CD74 NTF therefore accumulates in the HLA class II+ myeloid and lymphoid cells of SPPL2a-deficient patients. This toxic fragment selectively depletes IL-12-and IL-23-producing CD1c(+) conventional dendritic cells (cDC2s) and their circulating progenitors. Moreover, SPPL2a-deficient memory T(H)1(star) cells selectively fail to produce IFN-gamma when stimulated with mycobacterial antigens in vitro. Finally, Sppl2a(-/-) mice lack cDC2s, have CD4(+) T cells that produce small amounts of IFN-gamma after BCG infection, and are highly susceptible to infection with BCG or Mycobacterium tuberculosis. These findings suggest that inherited SPPL2a deficiency in humans underlies mycobacterial disease by decreasing the numbers of cDC2s and impairing IFN-gamma production by mycobacterium-specific memory T(H)1(star) cells.

Disruption of an antimycobacterial circuit between dendritic and helper T cells in human SPPL2a deficiency / Kong, Xf; Martinez-Barricarte, R; Kennedy, J; Mele, F; Lazarov, T; Deenick, Ek; Ma, Cs; Breton, G; Lucero, Kb; Langlais, D; Bousfiha, A; Aytekin, C; Markle, J; Trouillet, C; Jabot-Hanin, F; Arlehamn, Csl; Rao, G; Picard, C; Lasseau, T; Latorre, D; Hambleton, S; Deswarte, C; Itan, Y; Abarca, K; Moraes-Vasconcelos, D; Ailal, F; Ikinciogullari, A; Dogu, F; Benhsaien, I; Sette, A; Abel, L; Boisson-Dupuis, S; Schroder, B; Nussenzweig, Mc; Liu, K; Geissmann, F; Tangye, Sg; Gros, P; Sallusto, F; Bustamante, J; Casanova, Jl. - In: NATURE IMMUNOLOGY. - ISSN 1529-2908. - 19:9(2018), pp. 973-+. [10.1038/s41590-018-0178-z]

Disruption of an antimycobacterial circuit between dendritic and helper T cells in human SPPL2a deficiency

Latorre D;
2018-01-01

Abstract

Human inborn errors of IFN-gamma immunity underlie mycobacterial diseases. We describe patients with Mycobacterium bovis (BCG) disease who are homozygous for loss-of-function mutations of SPPL2A. This gene encodes a transmembrane protease that degrades the N-terminal fragment (NTF) of CD74 (HLA invariant chain) in antigen-presenting cells. The CD74 NTF therefore accumulates in the HLA class II+ myeloid and lymphoid cells of SPPL2a-deficient patients. This toxic fragment selectively depletes IL-12-and IL-23-producing CD1c(+) conventional dendritic cells (cDC2s) and their circulating progenitors. Moreover, SPPL2a-deficient memory T(H)1(star) cells selectively fail to produce IFN-gamma when stimulated with mycobacterial antigens in vitro. Finally, Sppl2a(-/-) mice lack cDC2s, have CD4(+) T cells that produce small amounts of IFN-gamma after BCG infection, and are highly susceptible to infection with BCG or Mycobacterium tuberculosis. These findings suggest that inherited SPPL2a deficiency in humans underlies mycobacterial disease by decreasing the numbers of cDC2s and impairing IFN-gamma production by mycobacterium-specific memory T(H)1(star) cells.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11768/194432
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